When describing the health of the US economy, there is a temptation among economists, market analysts, and politicians to argue that the only true picture of our current situation is a sweeping portrait - only by looking at the broadest of aggregate statistics can you determine the state of play, they argue. But the wide view can ignore important developments unfolding under the surface. Sometimes, even the healthiest-looking person might have high cholesterol.
"The algorithm has identified building permits as the most critical economic variable for predicting recessions. And while permits had been holding up reasonably well, as builders supported sales through interest rate buydowns and other incentives, inventories of unsold homes are now high and on the rise," Zandi warned. "In response, builders are pulling back, and permits have started to slump. They are now as low as they've been since the pandemic shutdowns."
There are certain words you don't want to hear in a medical checkup, or in an investment bank's recession outlook: "stable but elevated." It's a phrase that could refer to blood pressure, even risk of a heart attack, a favorite metaphor of hedge-fund legend Ray Dalio, or in UBS' evaluation, risk of a recession.