Quarterly Outlook
Fixed Income Outlook: Bonds Hit Reset. A New Equilibrium Emerges
Althea Spinozzi
Head of Fixed Income Strategy
Singapore Sales Trader
Trader Notes : Recession playbook
The economy typically goes through a few business cycles namely Expansion, Peak, Recession, Depression, Trough and Recovery. This article aims to show how investors and traders can position during the recessionary phase of the cycle.
What Happens During A Recession?
The National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) definition of a recession is a significant decline in economic activity across the economy lasting more than a few months that will affect employment and real incomes. Aggregate demand will fall as consumers tighten their belts, especially in discretionary spending. Industrial commodities will underperform as companies cut back on spending and investment anticipating lower demand ahead. Typically, the central bank will begin easing monetary conditions to help cushion the impact of the economic downturn by lowering interest rates. Investment managers tend to turn defensive during such times and allocate more to sectors like utilities and consumer staples which tend to outperform growth sectors during a recessionary environment. The tech sector tend to be tricky this time as it will experience the effects of decreased spending but would also see better valuation with lower interest rates. With the market expecting rates to fall, we could possibly see NDX outperforming the SPX in the period leading up to a recession.
What Can We Do During A Recession?
Investors
For long-term investors, a recession provides the opportunity to accumulate equities at a cheaper valuation. From an allocation perspective, it might be a good opportunity to diversify into other markets like Europe and Japan that are cheaper and further away from the credit contraction the US is experiencing. To hedge against a recession, investors can look to:
Traders
For traders who wish to take advantage of a possible slowdown in economic activity / recession, you can look to:
In most cases, the recession typically begins before we see major news agencies reporting that a recession is here. Markets move in anticipation of economic activity slowing down and hence the moment we see trends in inflation falling, credit activity declining and labour market slowing, sensitive markets like bond futures will tend to move higher in a flight to safety and in expectation of lower rates while commodities tend to underperform. The price action in these markets would usually offer some insight to where the economy might be heading before slower growth numbers are officially reported and hence it can be useful to watch these markets.