Morgan Stanley reveals mid-year recession, interest rate cut forecast

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After back-to-back 20%-plus returns for the S&P 500 in 2023 and 2024, concerns about stagflation and recession and the tariff debate have whipsawed the stock market.

After the S&P 500 reached an all-time high in mid-February, growing worry that a slowing economy would dent sales and profits plus renewed inflation fear due to newly imposed tariffs sent the benchmark tumbling 19%, just shy of bear-market territory.

The selloff was so fast and steep that most stocks became oversold, providing tinder for a major relief rally ignited when President Donald Trump temporarily paused many of his reciprocal tariffs.

The index has since climbed nearly 20%, erasing much of the losses since February and lifting it into the black year-to-date.

Regardless, the seismic pops and drops have taken a toll on investors’ psyches, and despite the recent gains, economic worries persist.

The jobs market has weakened over the past year, economic activity has slowed, and tariffs will likely remain in place, pressuring inflation and potentially backing the Federal Reserve into a corner.

The backdrop has many on Wall Street, including Morgan Stanley, updating their forecasts. The major investment firm recently released a midyear update that includes economic targets and shatters hopes for more Federal Reserve interest rate cuts this year.

The US economy is stumbling, and the Fed risks being behind the curve

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell is earning his pay this year.

The Fed’s dual mandate is low inflation and unemployment, two often competing goals. This year the tug-of-war between the two makes setting rates to encourage employment and discourage inflation particularly tough.

Inflation has fallen markedly since it peaked above 8% in mid-2022. Still, progress has slowed and inflation remains above the Fed’s 2% target. In April, the Consumer Price Index showed inflation at 2.3%, nearly matching levels seen in September.

Meanwhile, the job market isn’t nearly as strong as it was a year or two ago.

Unemployment of 4.2% is historically low, but it’s up from 3.4% in 2023. Meanwhile, in March 901,000 fewer jobs went unfilled compared with a year earlier, according to the Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey, the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Jolts report. Layoffs are also on the rise, climbing above 602,000 workers this year, up 87% from a year earlier.

The cracks reflect a slowing in overall economic activity that’s taking a toll on consumer confidence.

First-quarter gross domestic product contracted 0.3%, well below the 3% growth witnessed last summer. The University of Michigan’s Consumer Confidence Survey fell sharply to 50.8 in May, down 27% from one year ago. Americans now expect year-ahead inflation to be 7.3%, up from 6.5% last month.

The risk of more job losses and inflation reasserting itself because of tariffs, including a 30% tariff on China, 25% tariffs on Canada, Mexico and autos, and a 10% baseline tariff, has tied the Fed’s hands.

If it cuts rates, as was widely expected earlier this year, it risks fanning inflationary flames. Raising rates might slow inflation but could force us into a recession.

Morgan Stanley revamps its Fed interest-rate, recession forecast

Reading the tea leaves isn’t easy this year, but that’s not stopping Wall Street from trying.

Morgan Stanley, one of the largest investment banks, recently released a midyear update to its outlook for Fed interest-rate cuts and the US economy. The forecast won’t win many fans hoping for lower mortgage rates or looking for new jobs.

Chief US Economist Michael Gapen correctly targeted slower growth and stickier inflation entering 2025. Now, he says that the effective tariff rate of 13% will remain, pressuring the economy while avoiding a recession.

Unfortunately, Gapen hasn’t seen any real help from the Fed this year. He says the Fed will delay additional interest rate cuts “into 2026.”

Información extraída de: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/morgan-stanley-reveals-mid-recession-193700973.html

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