Banking turmoil means recession fears are creeping back
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[March 29, 2023] (Reuters)
- The failures of U.S. lenders Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) and Signature
Bank, followed by Credit Suisse's rescue, and the ensuing turmoil in
world markets have re-ignited the recession risks that appeared to have
abated just a few weeks ago.
Traders now bet the Federal Reserve is practically done hiking interest
rates. Optimism that followed China's economic reopening and tumbling
energy prices early this year has dimmed.
"The bigger, medium-term implication, of what's happened in the last
month is that global growth will be far weaker in six months than we
thought even just a few weeks ago," said Mike Riddell, senior fixed
income portfolio manager at Allianz Global Investors.
Here's what some closely watched market indicators say about recession
risks:
1/ CRUNCH TIME?
Central bankers are closely monitoring the potential for banking stress,
on top of lending conditions that were already tightening, to trigger a
credit crunch.
Fed chief Jerome Powell believes financial conditions have likely
tightened more than traditional measures indicate. European Central Bank
boss Christine Lagarde has also said the market turmoil may help fight
inflation.
Goldman Sachs reckons the tightening in bank lending standards it
expects could subtract at least 0.25 to 0.5 percentage points from 2023
U.S. economic growth, equivalent to the impact of another 25-50 bps of
Fed rate hikes.
AXA Investment Managers Chief Economist Gilles Moec noted small and big
U.S. banks were borrowing heavily and holding onto cash, citing Fed data
showing bank asset and liability positions as of March 15.
"There is a sizeable risk that the ongoing banking trouble triggers a
'sudden stop' in lending which would then send the economy into the sort
of recession which would go beyond what is strictly needed to tame
inflation," he added.
2/ CUTS NOT HIKES
As the outlook darkens, traders were betting on Tuesday another Fed rate
hike is a coin toss, with over 50 bps worth of rate cuts priced by
year-end. ECB rates are seen peaking at around 3.4%, down from over 4%
in early March
This has pushed shorter-dated borrowing costs down. U.S. two-year bond
yields have dropped 80 bps in March, so yield curves are less inverted
than prior to SVB's collapse.
While inverted yield curves, where long-dated borrowing costs are lower
than shorter-dated ones, are good recession predictors, inversion has
been followed by steepening as past recessions neared.
The U.S. two-year/10-year yield curve has steepened over 40 bps this
month, the biggest monthly steepening since 2009.
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A customer is escorted into the Silicon
Valley Bank headquarters in Santa Clara, California, U.S., March 13,
2023. REUTERS/Brittany Hosea-Small/
3/ BANK STOCK ROUT
World shares down just 0.1% in March and still sitting on gains this
year seem to signal little recession risk, but worries are mounting
under the surface.
Global bank stocks, which had outperformed the MSCI World Stock
Index before the turmoil, are down nearly 15% this month. Sectors
sensitive to the growth outlook such as real estate and oil and gas
are also now underperforming.
Banking woes have also pushed up the risk premium on corporate debt.
Euro high yield spreads over risk-free rates for example jumped 140
basis points from March 9 to March 20.
Still, those spreads remain below highs touched last year and far
below levels reached during the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic, suggesting
recession concerns in credit markets appear limited.
4/ DR. COPPER
Copper, nicknamed "Dr Copper" for its track record as a boom-bust
indicator, is still up 7% this year. But it has lost some of its
early-January gusto, reflecting market uncertainty and as demand
from China - the world's largest commodity consumer - hasn't
rocketed as expected after its re-opening.
The price ratio of copper to gold - seen as a gauge of risk appetite
- hit its lowest in nearly seven months in March as investors
ditched assets more closely linked to the underlying economy for
safe havens.
5/ WHAT RECESSION?
Data is still delivering positive surprises at the highest rate
since May 2022, a Citi index shows, suggesting economic statistics
are not yet flashing a recession warning.
U.S. and euro zone business activity meanwhile accelerated more than
expected in March.
"The (U.S.) data was largely collected after SVB's collapse, which
suggests that the initial negative impact from uncertainty has been
modest," said Kristoffer Kjær Lomholt, head of FX, corporate
research and chief analyst at Danske Bank.
(Reporting by Yoruk Bahceli, Naomi Rovnick, Chiara Elisei, Amanda
Cooper, additional reporting by Peter Hobson; Compiled by Yoruk
Bahceli; Graphics by Vincent Flasseur; Editing by Dhara Ranasinghe
and Andrea Ricci)
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