US Already Descending Into Recession: Economist

US Already Descending Into Recession: Economist
Traders work at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) at Wall Street in New York on Feb. 24, 2020. (Johannes Eisele/AFP via Getty Images)
Petr Svab
6/12/2022
Updated:
7/17/2022
0:00

The U.S. economy is already in the process of entering a recession, according to an economist who specializes in how sentiment affects markets.

Peter Atwater predicted that a large amount of malinvested capital will be wiped out and areas of the economy that have historically been resistant to crises may not be so this time. His research indicates that the economy is under the influence of “confidence cycles” and when consumer sentiment shifts toward the expectation of a recession, the market will actually enter one.

“I think the cake has been baked from the sentiment perspective where people are now acting on the assumption that a recession is coming. And remember, it’s that action that actually causes a recession to come,” Atwater, a former hedge fund manager who’s now a lecturer at the College of William & Mary in Virginia, said during a recent Wealthion interview.

Atwater says thousands of companies have fudged their earnings with easy cash because of the ultra-low interest rates set by the Federal Reserve.

“With free money, the ability to financially engineer your earnings results is unlimited,” he said.

The Federal Reserve building in Washington on Jan. 26, 2022. (Joshua Roberts/Reuters)
The Federal Reserve building in Washington on Jan. 26, 2022. (Joshua Roberts/Reuters)

Now that rates are going up, such companies will start having trouble rolling over their loans.

“It’s sucking the air out of the room,” he said, anticipating that “thousands” of such companies may go under.

As credit gets tighter, a lot of “dream” ventures will prove to be unfeasible and fail, he predicted, noting that overconfidence in the market has caused investors “to buy promises of even the most ridiculous things.”

“There was so much capital irresponsibly deployed to capture dreams that the volume of equity destruction is going to be massive.”

The financial elite is, so far, failing to appreciate the direness of the situation because their lifestyle has become extraordinarily insulated from a commoner’s reality, he said, calling it “work from home blindness.”

“The financial elite are spending so much time sequestered away from the real world that I think they’ve lost sight of the fact that the folks who are delivering things to them—who live in the real world—have to buy gas.”

During previous recessions, some parts of the economy were usually spared major losses and could thus serve as safe havens for investors. Those would include government bonds and businesses serving high-end clientele, such as luxury goods producers. In recent years, big tech companies have also been treated as safe bets.

A trucker gets in the cab of his truck after he fueled up at the Love's Truck Stop in Springville, Utah, on Dec. 1, 2021. (GEORGE FREY/AFP via Getty Images)
A trucker gets in the cab of his truck after he fueled up at the Love's Truck Stop in Springville, Utah, on Dec. 1, 2021. (GEORGE FREY/AFP via Getty Images)

All of those, however, may get pummeled this time too, according to Atwater.

“What I don’t think investors quite appreciate is we’re having an unwinding in both fixed income and equity simultaneously here. And there’s not going to be any place to hide in that.”

Businesses serving the rich, meanwhile, may find that their clientele is in worse financial shape than expected.

In recent years, there are indicators that the rich have taken on large amounts of debt, following the mantra of “don’t sell it, borrow against it,” in order to avoid taxes, Atwater said.

“It’s a masterful tax strategy, but it is completely devoid of a connection to reality.”

As a result, he noted, “nobody has contemplated that the biggest potential losses could be among the customers that have heretofore been the safest.”

He has also noticed an unusual phenomenon in which market actors are getting worn down by prolonged market instability without actually hitting a bottom.

“Everybody, they sort of feel like, ‘Are we there yet? Is it done?’ People are tired. It’s not fear, it’s fatigue. And I’ve never seen a market bottom on whining in the sense that we’re just all tired of it.”