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Is the U.S. Economy in a Recession?

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Is the U.S. Economy in a Recession?

In an early July poll, 58% of Americans said they thought the U.S. economy was in a recession, up from 53% in June and 48% in May.1 Yet many economic indicators, notably employment, remain strong. The current situation is unusual, and there is little consensus among economists as to whether a recession has begun or may be coming soon.2

Considering the high level of public concern, it may be helpful to look at how a recession is officially determined and some current indicators that suggest strength or weakness in the U.S. economy.

Business Cycle Dating

U.S. recessions and expansions are officially measured and declared by the Business Cycle Dating Committee of the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), a private nonpartisan organization that began dating business cycles in 1929. The committee, which was formed in 1978, includes eight economists who specialize in macroeconomic and business cycle research.3

The NBER defines a recession as “a significant decline in economic activity that is spread across the economy and lasts more than a few months.” The committee looks at the big picture and makes exceptions as appropriate. For example, the economic decline of March and April 2020 was so extreme that it was declared a recession even though it lasted only two months.4

To determine peaks and troughs of economic activity, the committee studies a range of monthly economic data, with special emphasis on six indicators: personal income, consumer spending, wholesale-retail sales, industrial production, and two measures of employment. Because official data is typically reported with a delay of a month or two — and patterns may be clear only in hindsight — it generally takes some time before the committee can identify a peak or trough. Some short recessions (including the 2020 downturn) were over by the time they were officially announced.5

Strong Employment

Over the last few months, economic data has been mixed. Consumer spending declined in May when adjusted for inflation, but bounced back in June.6 Retail sales were strong in June, but manufacturing output dropped for a second month.7The strongest and most consistent data has been employment. The economy added 372,000 jobs in June, the third consecutive month of gains in that range. Total nonfarm employment is now just 0.3% below the pre-pandemic level, and private-sector employment is actually higher (offset by losses in government employment).8

The unemployment rate has been 3.6% for four straight months, essentially the same as before the pandemic (3.5%), which was the lowest rate since 1969.9 Initial unemployment claims ticked up slightly in mid-July but remained near historic lows.10 In the 12 recessions since World War II, the unemployment rate has always risen, with a median increase of 3.5 percentage points.11

Negative GDP Growth

One common definition of a recession is a decrease in real gross domestic product (GDP) for two consecutive quarters, and the current situation meets that criterion. Real (inflation-adjusted) GDP dropped at an annual rate of 1.6% in the first quarter of 2022 and by 0.9% in the second quarter.12 Because GDP is reported on a quarterly basis, the NBER committee cannot use it to measure monthly economic activity, but the committee does look at it for defining recessions more broadly.

Since 1948, the U.S. economy has never experienced two consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth without a recession being declared. However, the current situation could be an exception, due to the strong employment market and some anomalies in the GDP data.13

Negative first-quarter GDP was largely due to a record U.S. trade deficit, as businesses and consumers bought more imported goods to satisfy demand. This was a sign of economic strength rather than weakness. Consumer spending and business investment — the two most important components of GDP — both increased for the quarter.14

Initial second-quarter GDP data showed a strong positive trade balance but slower growth in consumer spending, with an increase in spending on services and a decrease in spending on goods. The biggest negative factors were a slowdown in residential construction and a substantial cutback in growth of business inventories.15 Although inventory reductions can precede a recession, it’s too early to tell whether they signal trouble or are simply a return to more appropriate levels.16Economists may not know whether the economy is contracting until there is additional monthly data.

The Inflation Factor

With employment at such high levels, it may be questionable to characterize the current economic situation as a recession. However, the employment market could change, and recessions can be driven by fear as well as by fundamental economic weakness.

The fear factor is inflation, which ran at an annual rate of 9.1% in June, the highest since 1981.17 Wages have increased, but not enough to make up for the erosion of spending power, making many consumers more cautious despite the strong job market.18 If consumer spending slows significantly, a recession is certainly possible, even if it is not already under way.

Inflation has forced the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates aggressively, with a 0.50% increase in the benchmark federal funds rate in May, followed by 0.75% increases in June and July.19 It takes time for the effect of higher rates to filter through the economy, and it remains to be seen whether there will be a “soft landing” or a more jarring stop that throws the economy into a recession.

No one has a crystal ball, and economists’ projections range widely, from a remote chance of a recession to an imminent downturn with a moderate recession in 2023.20 If that turns out to be the case, or if a recession arrives sooner, it’s important to remember that recessions are generally short-lived, lasting an average of just 10 months since World War II. By contrast, economic expansions have lasted 64 months.21

To put it simply: The good times typically last longer than the bad. Projections are based on current conditions, are subject to change, and may not come to pass.

1)  Investor’s Business Daily, July 12, 2022

2) The Wall Street Journal, July 17, 2022

3–5) National Bureau of Economic Research, 2021

6, 12, 15, 21) U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, 2022

7) Reuters, July 15, 2022

8–9, 17–18) U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2022

10) The Wall Street Journal, July 14, 2022

11) The Wall Street Journal, July 4, 2022

13–14) MarketWatch, July 5, 2022

16) The Wall Street Journal, July 28, 2022

19)  Federal Reserve, 2022

20) The New York Times, July 1, 2022

IMPORTANT DISCLOSURES FF Global Capital does not provide investment, tax, legal, or retirement advice or recommendations. The information presented here is not specific to any individual’s personal circumstances. To the extent that this material concerns tax matters, it is not intended or written to be used, and cannot be used, by a taxpayer for the purpose of avoiding penalties that may be imposed by law. Each taxpayer should seek independent advice from a tax professional based on his or her individual circumstances. These materials are provided for general information and educational purposes based upon publicly available information from sources believed to be reliable — we cannot assure the accuracy or completeness of these materials. The information in these materials may change at any time and without notice.

Prepared by Broadridge Investor Communication Solutions, Inc. Copyright 2022

Top 30 Global Ideas for 2022

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Top 30 Global Ideas for 2022 Third-Quarter Update

In this note, we present our Top 30 Global Ideas for Q3 2022. This list remains one of high-conviction, long-term ideas, with quarterly updates that enable dynamic changes into names that we think offer higher- conviction upside potential.

Since publishing our Q2 update on April 4, 2022, the Top 30 list has delivered a total return of -17.4% (in USD terms) versus our benchmark, the MSCI World Index, at-15.6%. Year-to-date, the list has delivered a total return of -14.0%, above the benchmark at -20.1%, and since inception of our quarterly list at year-end 2019, the Top 30 has delivered a total return of +20.8%, above the benchmark at +13.2%.

Recession risk, rising rates and inflation remain key areas of focus across sectors. As of our latest US Equity Strategy RBC Macroscope update (published June 6, 2022), on a 6-12 month view, our Strategy team continues to believe that stock market leadership is transitioning from Value to Growth and that defensive areas have started to look over-owned and overvalued, while acknowledging near-term risks to that view should equities start to price in a full recession.

With the changes to the Top 30 list this quarter, we switch into best ideas that we also view as offering more attractive positioning against the current macro backdrop. On an equal-weighted basis, we increase the Top 30 list’s Real Estate and Utilities exposure to overweight versus the MSCI World Index, maintain a modestly overweight position in Financials, and remain notably overweight Energy and Industrials, driven by the inclusion of individual high-conviction names under coverage.

In Real Estate, we add Communications Infrastructure company American Tower (AMT US), which we think is well positioned to benefit from mobile 5G spending by its carrier customers, with accelerating site leasing trends in its core US market as well as many of its international markets. In 2023 and beyond, we believe AMT should post 10%+ AFFO/share growth and an attractive dividend, coupled with inflation protection in most of its international markets given its CPI-linked lease escalators.

In Utilities, we add independent power producer The AES Corporation (AES US). We believe AES offers a compelling decarbonization story, potential to become a leader in the clean energy producer space, and attractive valuation relative to defensive utility peers.

In Health Care, we add Lonza Group (LONN SW), which we think is positioned to benefit from multi-year structural tailwinds in biologic pharmaceutical manufacturing. We see life science funding concerns as overblown for CDMOs, and our recent supply/demand analysis suggests the long-term growth outlook is de- risked. In our view, the shares appear attractively valued at current levels vs. peers and due to the high return on incremental invested capital (25-30%), as well as opportunities to invest using its strong balance sheet. We remove robotic-assisted surgery company Intuitive Surgical (ISRG US) as we see potential for a tightening of hospital capital spending in the near term, elongating sales cycles. That said, we maintain an Outperform rating and continue to view ISRG as uniquely positioned for a multi-year runway of growth.

In Information Technology we replace Twilio (TWLO US) with Veeva Systems (VEEV US), which we view as offering defensive attributes (Veeva sells mission critical software to life sciences, a defensive industry), multiple growth drivers, a leading financial model, and reasonable valuation.

In Consumer Discretionary, we remove Amazon.com (AMZN US) as we see risk to H2/22 outlook in the event of marginal consumer softness and associated excess capacity, while maintaining an Outperform rating. In Materials, we remove building solutions manufacturer Louisiana-Pacific (LPX US) given potential for near-term headwinds associated with higher interest rates and slowing North American housing growth, while our long- term positive thesis remains intact.

This report contains further detail on our investment thesis for each of the names on the Q3/22 list beginning on page 7. We encourage you to reach out to our team to continue the dialogue regarding their investment ideas.

We see our fundamental work being increasingly augmented by our four flagship research products: RBC FusionTM, RBC TM, RBC ElementsTM, and RBC ESG StratifyTM. RBC Fusion offers peer-reviewed, unique reports on our highest-conviction, most-differentiated calls. RBC Imagine is a series of fundamental research reports focused on disruptive forces that we believe will transform the world. Our RBC Elements work features proprietary insights generated in collaboration with our internal data science team. With RBC ESG Stratify, we separate the signal from the noise on ESG matters with precise, analytical research.

Top 30 Global Ideas for 2022 — Changes this Quarter

Additions: The AES Corporation (AES US), American Tower (AMT US), Lonza Group (LONN SW), Veeva Systems (VEEV US)

Deletions: Amazon.com (AMZN US), Intuitive Surgical (ISRG US), Louisiana-Pacific (LPX US), Twilio (TWLO US)

Top 30 Global Ideas for 2022 — Pricing Data

Notes:


1 Subsequent to the July 4, 2022 pricing of the Top 30 Global Ideas for 2022, ADS’s price target was lowered to EUR 205.00 (from EUR 265.00) on July 5, 2022. 


2 AltaGas Ltd. (TSX: ALA) has agreed to sell its Alaskan Utilities to TriSummit Utilities Inc. announced on May 26, 2022. RBC Capital Markets served as financial advisor to AltaGas. The transaction is anticipated to close no later than the first quarter of 2023 and will be subject to customary closing conditions, including State regulatory approvals. This research report and the information herein is not intended to provide voting advice, serve as an endorsement of the transaction or result in procurement, withholding or revocation of a proxy or any other action by a security holder.


3 This security is restricted pursuant to RBC Capital Markets policy and, as a result, its continued inclusion in the Top 30 Global Ideas list has not been reviewed or confirmed as of the date hereof.

Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future performance. Price performance does not take into account relevant costs, including commissions and interest charges or other applicable expenses that may be associated with transactions in these shares.

Top 30 Global Ideas for 2022 — Changes This Quarter

Note: Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future performance. Price performance does not take into account relevant costs, including commissions and interest charges or other applicable expenses that may be associated with transactions in these shares.

Source: Bloomberg and RBC Capital Markets

Top 30 Global Ideas — Performance Summary

Although the Top 30 is not intended to be a relative product, having been created to capture RBC Capital Markets’ best ideas on an absolute basis, we compare the performance of the Top 30 to the MSCI Developed World Index and regional indices to provide context for its returns. See the performance tables below for Q2 2022 (April 4, 2022 to July 4, 2022) and since inception (December 2019).


Notes: Q2 2022 performance calculated from the time of publishing the Top 30 Q2 2022 update before market open on April 4, 2022, to market close on July 4, 2022. Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future performance. Price performance does not take into account relevant costs, including commissions and interest charges or other applicable expenses that may be associated with transactions in these shares.


1 This security is restricted pursuant to RBC Capital Markets policy and, as a result, its continued inclusion in the Top 30 Global Ideas list has not been reviewed or confirmed as of the date hereof.
Source: Bloomberg and RBC Capital Markets

IMPORTANT DISCLOSURES FF Global Capital does not provide investment, tax, legal, or retirement advice or recommendations. The information presented here is not specific to any individual’s personal circumstances. To the extent that this material concerns tax matters, it is not intended or written to be used, and cannot be used, by a taxpayer for the purpose of avoiding penalties that may be imposed by law. Each taxpayer should seek independent advice from a tax professional based on his or her individual circumstances. These materials are provided for general information and educational purposes based upon publicly available information from sources believed to be reliable — we cannot assure the accuracy or completeness of these materials. The information in these materials may change at any time and without notice.

Prepared by Broadridge Investor Communication Solutions, Inc. Copyright 2022

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