To weather a recession, look past yield curves

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Global Return Asset Management letter to investors for the month of October 2019.

Q2 hedge fund letters, conference, scoops etc

consumption function
geralt / Pixabay

Dear Friends and Partners,

With total certainty, we know that in the future the sun will rise and a recession will occur.

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Q2 hedge fund letters, conference, scoops etc

Seeing no reason to discuss the sun rising, let’s talk about the potential for a recession!

Much like boarding up the windows of your beachfront home because there’s a storm on the horizon, we’re strategically positioning our portfolio to minimize risk and optimize returns. And we’ve created this multi-part report to provide you information on:

  1. Where we’re seeing risks that could be ignited by a recession
  2. Which sectors and industries are better insulated from the risks of a recession
  3. How we’re positioning our portfolio to sidestep these risks and optimize results

My goal for each section of this report is to be as concise as possible. Strange goal, right?!

Here’s why brevity is important: It requires me to communicate factual data, not hypotheses or conjecture (two things you, the reader, probably don’t need more of!).

This first section explains why an inverted yield curve is merely an indicator of conditions that could cause a recession but doesn’t actually forecast a recession.


Part One: Look Past the Yield Curve

To Weather a Recession, Look Past Yield Curves

According to the National Bureau of Economic Research, a recession is:

… a significant decline in economic activity spread across the economy, lasting more than a few months, normally visible in real GDP, real income, employment, industrial production, and wholesale and retail sales.1

That definition probably doesn’t surprise anyone. What might surprise you is that inverted yield curves don’t forecast a recession, they only forecast conditions that make a recession more likely. But before explaining this difference, let’s talk about what causes interest rates to rise, fall or invert.

To answer this, we must go waaaaay back in time (Wall Street asks, “Further back than yesterday?”) to the year 1957. That was the year Milton Friedman introduced us to The Permanent Income Hypothesis in his seminal research, “A Theory of the Consumption Function.” 2

This hypothesis states that an individual’s spending today depends not only on their current income, but also on the likely path of their future income. For example, if someone expects higher income in the future, then they will consume more today. And we can actually observe this happen in near real-time by looking at data such-as savings and spending rates (such-as credit card balances, auto purchases, etc.).

This hypothesis also applies to corporate America. A company’s current spending is predicated on the likely path of its future income. And like individuals, we can see in near real-time whether corporate America is saving or spending its money by looking at its capital allocation decisions and its income statements and balance sheets.

Collectively, when the U.S. population or corporate America is feeling confident about its prospects, spending will increase and savings will decrease. This combination – increased spending and decreased savings – is what creates upward pressure on real interest rates, which is manifested in yield spreads.

For example, a high 1-year yield indicates the community expects high growth over the next 1-year; the same is true for a 10-year yield. Further, if the difference between the 10-year yield and 1-year yield is positive, then growth is expected to accelerate. Conversely, if the difference between the 10-year yield and 1-year yield is negative – or inverted – then growth is expected to decelerate. 3

News Flash! That’s the reason an inverted yield curve doesn’t forecast a recession!

Did you miss the reason? It’s easy to miss, so re-read the last sentence of the previous paragraph.

An inverted yield curve only forecasts a deceleration in growth, not an actual recession. And we know that industries are always growing and contracting, yet this hardly causes a recession.

So then, what causes a recession? Stay tuned for Part Two!

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1 The National Bureau of Economic Research. http://www.nber.org/cycles.html.

2 Friedman, M. The Permanent Income Hypothesis. “A Theory of the Consumption Function”. Princeton University Press. 1957. https://www.nber.org/books/frie57-1.

3 The 1-year and 2-year Treasury notes are highly correlated; when the 10-year and 2-year spread has inverted, so has the 10-year and 1-year.


As always, I welcome the opportunity to address any questions you may have about our technology, risk management or how we invest.

Sincerely,

Elliot Trexler

www.GlobalReturnAM.com

This article first appeared on ValueWalk Premium

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