Consumer sentiment drops in March to 57.9, according to University of Michigan survey, worse than expected
Not pretty for consumer confidence or future inflation expectations. I don't see a rate cut this year, and I expect to see the 10 year start to rise again.
That's interesting because the EOCI and leading economic indicator are positive and trending up.
Every time I see data or conversations like this all I can think of is Mathew Berry’s 100 facts articles. Data can be shaped and molded to tell almost any story. Makes it so hard to decipher because it’s all “true”.
True, but it doesn't appear to be huge doom and gloom out there. The best indicator is unemployment and that's hanging in there. Economic output is pretty decent and dramatically improving over the last few years - the last few years buoyed by huge govt. spending. Now those are reversing as govt. is getting much tighter and business conditions are improving.
This is another good composite view of economic conditions, which have us in somewhat negative territory. It gives another look at facets of the economy and has value when you see it over time. Looks like consumer sentiment, house, and car sales are what's hurting - no surprise with current interest rates.
http://www.econpi.com/
I posted a while back in the stock thread that I didn't see any rate cuts this year and lean toward hikes, if anything, so right with you there.
Oh, and just to be completely contrarian, here is a pretty good article that refutes the premise that the cause of the current downturn was tariffs. Something I mostly agree with - my thoughts are the tariffs tipped the scales over the precipice on what was a mildly overheated market. So the straw that broke the camel's back.
The "negatives" right now are almost completely wrapped up in sentiment. Keeping with the theme of the entire life of this thread, I haven't seen any economic data that points towards the direction people generally "feel" things are going, outside of a few cherry picked indicators similar to those that have been shared since the inception of this thread, which are often non-predictive on their own or taken out of context.
And that makes sense, given that the things people worry will trigger a big downturn aren't really reflected in any numbers yet, but sentiment is getting ahead of the curve here.
Sometimes it can become a self fulfilling prophecy, where people stop spending because they're worried about a downturn, and that drop in spending helps to create numbers that indicate a downturn, which reduces spending more, and so on. But sentiment can reverse fast. This is around the 5th likely recession we've been through in this thread's 2 year history, and the majority of the time we see that no matter how much people worry about spending when chatting, when push comes to shove they spend the money anyway.
We don't know if empirically these changes are actually going to have a huge effect on things like inflation, unemployment, earnings reports, etc yet. It's entirely possible and even possibly the more likely case that if and when it doesn't have as large effect on those empirical numbers as people expect, sentiment will reverse practically overnight. It's also possible we
will see it in those numbers and things will snowball from there, but I think that is the less likely scenario.