Market Wakes Up to Fact That Fed Pivot Could Signal Recession

The steady drumbeat of warnings that the American economy is careening toward a recession finally struck a nerve on Wall Street.

Investors who had tuned out warnings for the past two months — from the most inverted Treasury yield curve in four decades to a wipeout for 2022’s heady oil price gains — began trading as if the biggest threat to risk assets was now a looming downturn in growth.

Cyclical stocks led the S&P 500 to a 3.4% drop in the week after the equity benchmark failed to hold above its average price for the past 200 days. While optimism that the Fed would slow the pace of rate increases had stoked a 14% rally since mid-October, investor moods have now darkened with worries that such a move, when it does come, will be the mark of an economy laid low.

Already signs are emerging that the growth is buckling under the Fed’s aggressive tightening. The US services sector contracted last month. Although the labor market remains sturdy, some weakness has appeared, most recently in another rise in continuing claims for jobless benefits. At the same time, inflation may have peaked but it’s still elevated enough to keep the Fed vigilant, raising the risk it will overtighten.

“We will shift from seeing ‘bad data’ as being ‘good’ to bad data being bad because it is a signal the economy is weakening faster and worse than most expected,” said Peter Tchir, head of macro strategy at Academy Securities.

Markets have started trading the stream of gloomy economic news as bad, rather than a reason to rally on the prospect for easier Fed policy. At the same time, inflation remains elevated — evidenced by an unexpectedly rapid rise in producer prices last month — and the central bank will render its final policy verdict of the year Wednesday. Taken together, it was enough to squash the fall rally.