Here’s What It Says Happens Next

For the better part of the last two and a half years, the bulls have been in firm control on Wall Street. The mature stock-powered Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJINDICES: ^DJI), benchmark S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC), and growth-oriented Nasdaq Composite (NASDAQINDEX: ^IXIC) all achieved numerous record-closing highs during the current bull market rally.

The catalysts behind this rally have been abundant and include stock-split euphoria, the artificial intelligence (AI) revolution, President Donald Trump’s November victory, and the resilience of the U.S. economy. Unfortunately, the foundation of the U.S. economy may not be as strong as advertised.

A slightly askew stack of financial newspapers, with one visible headline that reads, Recession Fears.
Image source: Getty Images.

At any given moment, there’s bound to be one or more data points, events, or correlative statistics that spell trouble for the U.S. economy and/or stock market. For example, in 2023 we witnessed the first sizable decline in U.S. M2 money supply since the Great Depression. The very few times M2 has dropped by 2% on a year-over-basis, when back-tested more than 150 years, correlate with periods of depression and double-digit unemployment in the U.S.

But M2 money supply doesn’t appear to be signaling imminent trouble for the U.S. economy. The same can’t necessarily be said for the Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s recession probability tool.

The New York Fed’s recession-forecasting tool takes into account the difference in yield (known as spread) between the 10-year Treasury bond and three-month Treasury bill to decipher how likely it is that the U.S. economy will fall into a recession over the next 12 months.

Typically, the Treasury yield curve, which is a depiction of various bond and bill maturity dates mapped out by yield over time, slopes up and to the right. This is to say, bonds set to mature in 10, 20 or 30 years are going to bear higher yields than Treasury bills maturing in a year or less. Ideally, the longer your money is tied up in an interest-bearing investment vehicle, the higher the yield should be.

Where things get wonky is when the Treasury yield curve inverts. This is where the yield on short-term T-bills is higher than for long-term bonds. Yield-curve inversions typically occur when investors are concerned about the outlook for the U.S. economy. Although not every yield-curve inversion has been followed by a recession, it’s worth pointing out that every recession since World War II has been preceded by a yield-curve inversion.

US Recession Probability Chart
US Recession Probability data by YCharts. Grey areas denote U.S. recession.

As you’ll note from the chart, one of the steepest (and lengthiest) inversions of the 10-year/three-month yield curve in history led to a recession probability that peaked at north of 70% in 2023. Since October 1966, there hasn’t been a single instance where the probability of a U.S. recession has surpassed 32% and an official downturn failed to materialize.

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