Instead of a single, declared recession, various private sectors experienced individual downturns at different times since 2022. This out-of-consensus view suggests the economic cycle has already bottomed, explaining why stocks have rallied strongly since what the speaker calls 'Liberation Day' in April.
The ratio of leading-to-coincident economic indicators is at historic lows seen only in deep recessions (1982, 2009). However, this may be skewed by the leading indicators' reliance on extremely negative consumer sentiment surveys. This divergence suggests we might be at the bottom of a cycle, not the beginning of a downturn.
The sharp drop in the fiscal impulse represents a direct, dollar-for-dollar hit to nominal GDP that has already occurred. This indicates a recession is underway, not forthcoming. The National Bureau of Economic Analysis (NBER) will likely backdate the start of this recession to the third quarter of 2025.
Contrary to popular belief, the US already underwent a recession in early 2024, particularly for the average consumer ("Main Street"). This was masked by the AI sector boom and soaring asset prices. Revised labor data supports this view, and the economy is now in a reacceleration phase.
A multi-year "rolling recession," which affected different sectors sequentially, concluded in April, quietly kicking off a new bull market. This recovery is not yet obvious because many parts of the economy still lag, which presents a significant investment opportunity.
A major disconnect exists between Wall Street and Main Street. While jobs data points towards a potential recession, the S&P 500 is hitting record highs. Since recessions are historically preceded by market downturns, investors are signaling a strong disbelief in the negative labor market signals.
Large-cap tech earnings are hitting record highs, driving stock indices up. Simultaneously, core economic indicators for small businesses and high-yield borrowers show they have been in a recession-like state for over a year, creating a stark divergence.
The post-COVID era of high government spending has ushered in a new economic paradigm. The elongated 10-year cycles of 1980-2020 are gone, replaced by shorter, more intense two-year bull markets followed by one-year downturns. This framework suggests we are currently in the early stages of a new up cycle.
Morgan Stanley posits the U.S. economy experienced a 'rolling recession' where different sectors declined sequentially. This downturn's 'finishing move' was a contraction in government jobs, which paradoxically signaled the end of the broader recession and the beginning of a recovery cycle.
Despite record market highs, the S&P 500's underlying earnings per share (EPS) have not yet recovered to their peak from early 2022. This "narrative violation" points to a hidden earnings recession for large-cap stocks, a fact that has been masked by market enthusiasm and multiple expansion.
A sharp, V-shaped rebound in corporate earnings revision breadth is a powerful but uncommon leading indicator. It suggests the private economy is decisively exiting an earnings recession and shifting into an early-cycle recovery, often before traditional economic data confirms the trend.