The current economic cycle is unlikely to end in a classic nominal slowdown where everyone loses their jobs. Instead, the terminal risk is a resurgence of high inflation, which would prevent the Federal Reserve from providing stimulus and could trigger a 2022-style market downturn.
Drawing from his time at the US Treasury, Amias Gerety explains that recessions are about slowing growth. A financial crisis is a far more dangerous event where fundamental assumptions collapse because assets previously considered safe are suddenly perceived as worthless, causing a "sudden stop" in the economy.
The Federal Reserve is tightening policy just as forward-looking inflation indicators are pointing towards a significant decline. This pro-cyclical move, reacting to lagging data from a peak inflation print, is a "classic Fed error" that unnecessarily tightens financial conditions and risks derailing the economy.
Contrary to conventional wisdom, re-accelerating inflation can be a positive for stocks. It indicates that corporations have regained pricing power, which boosts earnings growth. This improved earnings outlook can justify a lower equity risk premium, allowing for higher stock valuations.
When the prevailing narrative, supported by Fed actions, is that the economy will 'run hot,' it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. Consumers and institutions alter their behavior by borrowing more and buying hard assets, which in turn fuels actual inflation.
Market participants are conditioned to expect a dramatic "Minsky moment." However, the more probable reality is a slow, grinding decline characterized by a decade of flat equity prices, compressing multiples, and degrading returns—a "death by a thousand cuts" rather than one catastrophic event.
Unlike the 2008 crisis, which was concentrated in housing and banking, today's risk is an 'everything bubble.' A decade of cheap money has simultaneously inflated stocks, real estate, crypto, and even collectibles, meaning a collapse would be far broader and more contagious.
Policymakers can maintain market stability as long as inflation volatility remains low, even if the absolute level is above target. A spike in CPI volatility is the true signal that breaks the system, forces a policy response, and makes long-term macro views suddenly relevant.
The economy is now driven by high-income earners whose spending fluctuates with the stock market. Unlike historical recessions, a significant market downturn is now a prerequisite for a broader economic recession, as equities must fall to curtail spending from this key demographic.
The money printing that saved the economy in 2008 and 2020 is no longer as effective. Each crisis requires a larger 'dose' of stimulus for a smaller effect, creating an addiction to artificial liquidity that makes the entire financial system progressively more fragile.
The U.S. government's debt is so large that the Federal Reserve is trapped. Raising interest rates would trigger a government default, while cutting them would further inflate the 'everything bubble.' Either path leads to a systemic crisis, a situation economists call 'fiscal dominance.'