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he global economy has entered a period of elevated volatility, and previous investing approaches won’t work anymore, BlackRock said. A recession is imminent but central banks won’t be able to support markets this time by loosening policy, according to the money manager. “Recession is foretold as central banks race to try to tame inflation. It’s the opposite of past recessions,” BlackRock strategists said.

- The global economy has entered a period of elevated volatility, and previous investing approaches won’t work anymore, BlackRock said.
- A recession is imminent but central banks won’t be able to support markets this time by loosening policy, according to the money manager.
- “Recession is foretold as central banks race to try to tame inflation. It’s the opposite of past recessions,” BlackRock strategists said.
Editor’s Note: My, My…haw the mighty have fallen, yet… all they know to do on their way out is to spread even more vitriolic news! FEAR PORN is to be ignored as our 3D world continues to alter in ways sure to leave us in BEing in …
Quantum Joy!
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1 of 6 Photos in Gallery©Jim Spellman/Getty Images
‘Big Short’ investor Michael Burry, Cathie Wood, and Paul Krugman aren’t stressing about inflation. Here’s why 5 elite market-watchers expect prices to rise slower or even fall.
- Some leading market commentators aren’t fretting about inflation anymore.
- They expect prices to rise more slowly later this year, and view deflation as a possibility.
- Here’s what Michael Burry, Cathie Wood, Paul Krugman, Jeremy Siegel, and Tom Lee have said.
Several top-flight investors and commentators were sounding the alarm on high, prolonged inflation only a few weeks ago. Now, some elite market-watchers are predicting prices will rise more slowly in the coming months, and deflation could become the bigger risk.
Michael Burry, Cathie Wood, Paul Krugman, Jeremy Siegel, and Tom Lee have all weighed in on the fading inflation threat in recent days. Here’s a roundup of their comments:
A worldwide recession is just around the corner as central banks boost borrowing costs aggressively to tame inflation — and this time, it will ignite more market turbulence than ever before, according to BlackRock.
The global economy has already exited a four-decade era of stable growth and inflation to enter a period of heightened instability — and the new regime of increased unpredictability is here to stay, according to the world’s biggest asset manager.
That means policymakers will no longer be able to support markets as much as they did during past recessions, a team of BlackRock strategists led by vice chairman Philipp Hildebrand wrote in a report titled 2023 Global Outlook.
“Recession is foretold as central banks race to try to tame inflation. It’s the opposite of past recessions,” they said. “Central bankers won’t ride to the rescue when growth slows in this new regime, contrary to what investors have come to expect. Equity valuations don’t yet reflect the damage ahead.”
The prospect of limited policy support means investors need more dynamic methods — involving more frequent portfolio changes and taking a more “granular view on sectors, regions and sub-asset classes” — to navigate the volatility ahead, according to BlackRock.
- The global economy has entered a period of elevated volatility, and previous investing approaches won’t work anymore, BlackRock said.
- A recession is imminent but central banks won’t be able to support markets this time by loosening policy, according to the money manager.
- “Recession is foretold as central banks race to try to tame inflation. It’s the opposite of past recessions,” BlackRock strategists said.
1 of 6 Photos in Gallery©Jim Spellman/Getty Images
‘Big Short’ investor Michael Burry, Cathie Wood, and Paul Krugman aren’t stressing about inflation. Here’s why 5 elite market-watchers expect prices to rise slower or even fall.
- Some leading market commentators aren’t fretting about inflation anymore.
- They expect prices to rise more slowly later this year, and view deflation as a possibility.
- Here’s what Michael Burry, Cathie Wood, Paul Krugman, Jeremy Siegel, and Tom Lee have said.
Several top-flight investors and commentators were sounding the alarm on high, prolonged inflation only a few weeks ago. Now, some elite market-watchers are predicting prices will rise more slowly in the coming months, and deflation could become the bigger risk.
Michael Burry, Cathie Wood, Paul Krugman, Jeremy Siegel, and Tom Lee have all weighed in on the fading inflation threat in recent days. Here’s a roundup of their comments:
A worldwide recession is just around the corner as central banks boost borrowing costs aggressively to tame inflation — and this time, it will ignite more market turbulence than ever before, according to BlackRock.
The global economy has already exited a four-decade era of stable growth and inflation to enter a period of heightened instability — and the new regime of increased unpredictability is here to stay, according to the world’s biggest asset manager.
That means policymakers will no longer be able to support markets as much as they did during past recessions, a team of BlackRock strategists led by vice chairman Philipp Hildebrand wrote in a report titled 2023 Global Outlook.
“Recession is foretold as central banks race to try to tame inflation. It’s the opposite of past recessions,” they said. “Central bankers won’t ride to the rescue when growth slows in this new regime, contrary to what investors have come to expect. Equity valuations don’t yet reflect the damage ahead.”
The prospect of limited policy support means investors need more dynamic methods — involving more frequent portfolio changes and taking a more “granular view on sectors, regions and sub-asset classes” — to navigate the volatility ahead, according to BlackRock.
`Regime of greater macro volatility’
“What worked in the past won’t work now,” the strategists said. “The old playbook of simply ‘buying the dip’ doesn’t apply in this regime of sharper trade-offs and greater macro volatility. We don’t see a return to conditions that will sustain a joint bull market in stocks and bonds of the kind we experienced in the prior decade.”
Wall Street banks from Morgan Stanley and Bank of America to Deutsche Bank have warned that US stocks could plunge by more than 20% in 2023 due to an economic downturn and liquidity risks fueled by the Federal Reserve’s interest-rate increases. Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon sees just a 35% chance that the US economy avoids a recession.
A slowdown in the housing market, delays in corporate investment plans, a decline in consumers’ savings and deteriorating CEO confidence are early signs of the oncoming economic slump, according to BlackRock.
Still, the stock market hasn’t yet factored in the potential magnitude of the impending economic downturn, the strategists said.
“We don’t think equities are fully priced for recession,” they added. “Corporate earnings expectations have yet to fully reflect even a modest recession. This keeps us tactically underweight developed market equities.”
The S&P 500 index of large-cap US stocks is up more that 12% from a 23-month low reached in October, spurred mainly by expectations that the Federal Reserve will slow the pace of its interest-rate increases after a recent retreat in inflation.