Let's look at all these facts from a big-picture perspective. I think you'll see that while nothing rules out an economic deterioration of sorts, there is no sign yet of the deterioration that we would need to see in advance of another recession. If there's to be a trigger for another recession, it could be that John Bolton is right when he says that "the world has descended into chaos." What's affecting the market today is not any meaningful deterioration of the U.S. economic fundamentals, but a deterioration in the geopolitical fundamentals affecting the world. So far, the underlying fundamentals of the U.S. economy remain healthy.
Unemployment claims don't get much lower than they are today. But each time they've descended to this level, another recession has been just around the corner. However, it's important to keep in mind that claims don't trigger recessions; bad fiscal and/or monetary policy does. Claims are what result from the improvement or deterioration of the economy. So far, the U.S. economy continues to improve.
One way of thinking of swap spreads is that they are a proxy for the price that you have to pay to offload some of your risk onto someone else. They rise when big investors start getting anxious and everyone begins to feel uncomfortable with the level of risk they are carrying and uncomfortable with taking on counterparty risk. What we see in the above chart is that 2-yr swap spreads are still pretty low. In fact, for the past year or so they have been exceptionally low, and they are now back to levels (20-25 bps) that in the past have coincided with healthy, normal economic conditions.
Above you see the long-term graph of swap spreads. From an historical perspective they don't indicate anything unusual going on.
The recent rise in corporate credit spreads, shown in the graph above, hardly registers on a long-term time scale.
The Eurozone is nearer the epicenter of the current geopolitical crisis, so equities there have suffered more than in the U.S. The Euro Stoxx index fallen about 7-8% relative to the S&P 500 in the past two months. Europe has problems that we don't have; our economy is far less vulnerable to a deterioration of trade with Russia. If Europe deteriorates further, that will add to the considerable headwinds the U.S. economy is already facing, but it won't necessarily be a killer for the U.S.
Implied volatility, a proxy for the market's level of fear, uncertainty and doubt, is still very low from an historical perspective, as you see in the graph above. So far, the current "crisis" looks like a 2.5 tremor on the Richter Scale.
None of these charts looks very scary. Which is another way of saying that if you are scared of what might happen, then it's not going to cost you a lot to bail out of risk positions. Bear in mind, however, that bailing out means sitting in cash that pays you almost nothing, while risk assets continue to deliver much higher yields.
Update: The Obama Administration's ongoing efforts to stop corporate "inversions" arguably represent a more serious threat to the economy than the Russia/Ukraine crisis. Obamacare was arguably the most stupid thing the Obama administration has done to date. Trying to stop corporate inversions might be the second most stupid thing. Not only are they showing themselves to be very anti-business, they are displaying supreme ignorance of how business and taxation interact. Instead of trying to stop inversions they should simply fix the tax code. But no, they want to force things to work their way, giving top priority to government's claim on profits. This will keep the economy weaker than it otherwise could have been for the next few years, because capital doesn't like to stay where it is not welcome.
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