Investing in an Era of Flouted Rules

Key points

  • An era of flouted rules: The resilience of labor markets in the US may be confining the Sahm Rule as the latest in a series of “flouted rules.” Among the other rules are the inverted yield curve and persistently soft purchasing manager survey data which have—at least so far—erroneously guided expectations for a recession while actual data has continued surprising those expectations to the upside.
  • How restrictive is policy? Better-than-feared economic performance again raises the possibility that policy is not as restrictive as the Fed fears, potentially pushing back on the extent and pace of the Fed’s “normalization” cutting cycle. Bond markets are again repricing what appear to have been exaggerated hopes for deeper interest rate cuts, undermining recent bond performance both outright and as diversifiers.
  • Middle East uncertainty adds to hedging efficacy uncertainty: Middle East uncertainty adds to ongoing political uncertainty, unwinding the downward trend in oil prices that has helped headline inflation and consumer sentiment. Beyond near-term uncertainty, the prospects for hedging effectiveness across the maturity spectrum may matter more for portfolio construction and bond allocations.

An era of flouted rules

We are investing in an era of flouted rules. The tendency to blindly follow these rules has led investors towards prematurely de-risking and over-estimating the likelihood of recession. Historically reliable, leading recession indicators including surveys of manufacturing and service purchasing managers turned recessionary nearly two years ago. Similarly, the yield curve inversion as well as our preferred modified version of that indicator—the aggregate spread, which includes the excess of inflation over unemployment to that inversion—began signaling a recession over two years ago. Partly referencing these rules and inputs, consensus views on recession probabilities peaked last year around this time. They subsequently fell all throughout Q4 of last year and into this year.

The unique characteristics of the post-pandemic economy and recovery lie to blame for most of the ahistoric economic experience that has pushed back on these historically derived recession indicators. Fed Chair Jay Powell referenced this dynamic in the July Federal Open Market Committee (“FOMC”) press conference stating: