The Soft Landing Consensus

A string of CPI readings heading in the right direction…. a labor market and consumer that are still intact. All of the sudden, the recession consensus has given way to a soft landing. Should this be surprising though? If you look back historically, it shouldn’t be. In fact, in each of the past six recessions (ex-COVID), as the Fed rate hike cycle reached its conclusion, consensus leaned towards a soft landing…even in 2007.

Why is this the case? In most instances, the pause is signaled before any major damage starts to show up in the labor market. As shown in the charts below, initial claims and unemployment both begin to rise, on average, within 2.5 months of the peak in short term yields†. Inflation is falling, the Fed’s work is nearly done, and the labor market appears to be on solid ground, but that doesn’t mean the soft landing is necessarily going to play out. In the majority of cases historically, it hasn't.

unemployment

jobless claims

Will the soft landing be delivered this time around? Potentially, but over the past year, we have consistently highlighted the sting of monetary policy is always felt with a delay. It’s important not to be fooled into thinking it’s a done deal because the labor market has held up so well to this point.