Mid-Year Report

Doug Drabik discusses fixed income market conditions and offers insight for bond investors.

From the peak of interest rates in October 2023, the market sensed the end of Federal Reserve rate hikes. July 2023 was the last of their 11th rate hike totaling 525 basis points. The timing played a profound role in the 2024 economic predictions. At the beginning of 2024, many pundits earmarked 5 to 6 Fed rate cuts for 2024 starting in March. Economic activity was foretold to slow at the very least, develop into a mild recession, or become a full-blown recession in the more extraordinary forecasts. Inflation was to drop to below 2.5% if not to the Fed’s 2% target.

In fairness, these predictions were all over the board and forecasting is an inexact science. The 2024 consensus, however, was for a distinct slowdown in economic activity and lower interest rates led by a series of Fed rate cuts. We also are only halfway through the year so a lot remains to be seen going forward into the 3rd and 4th quarter. My view has been and continues to be a little outside the box. I believe that we are experiencing a general commonplace economic cycle but that it is not unfolding at the pace the market anticipates it should. We are emerging from a very extraordinary circumstance in the pandemic. Businesses were shut down and unprecedented government aid, backstops, debt deferral/forgiveness, and money infusions have held the economy up. Full employment and wage increases allowed consumer spending to remain resilient which also aided in deferring a recession. The yield curve remains inverted but its predictive consistency should not be ignored. Recessions typically occur months after the curve reverts to a normal slope.

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