Economics in the Time of Twitter

It has been a good year for U.S. investors. The global economic slowdown and geopolitical turmoil created a nearly irreversible thirst for super safe assets as reflected by the Barclays AGG bond index gaining 8.5%. At the same time, the health of the U.S. economy produced robust gains in equities, with the S&P 500 index up 21%. Happy surprises included long-term Treasuries up 20%, gold up 16%, and REITs up 25%. Continuing a long-term trend, international equities underperformed domestic and U.S. value stocks underperformed growth. However, the last quarter was a politically and economically volatile period in Europe, China, and the U.S. coinciding with a halt, and in some cases, a reversal, of long-term financial market trends. The AGG was up 2.3%, and the S&P was up a modest 1.2%.

The Federal Reserve

The Federal Reserve is at the center of investor interest relative to ongoing monetary policy and as a reflection of the state of the U.S. economy. There was a great deal of interest in whether the Fed would cut the fed funds rate at their meeting in mid-September. On the one hand, the U.S. economy appears robust. Low unemployment, strong consumer activity, steady though unspectacular GDP growth, and manageable inflation suggested no need to lower interest rates. On the other hand, global tensions from the U.S.-China trade war and slowing global growth suggested a narrative of possible near term recession. More importantly, presidential jawboning for more rate cuts from the Fed added a note of political interference in the management of the economy. Tealeaf readers were particularly anxious to parse whether any rate cut was due to pure economics or due to political influence by the President. While the Fed ended up cutting the fed funds rate by a quarter percent, the minutes provided no clear guidance of future policy.

The Fed is trying to thread a needle between economic and political factors. It is a legitimate concern that business confidence has fallen for the sixth consecutive quarter as geopolitical uncertainty has taken hold. No one wants to kill the long-term economic expansion that is well into its tenth year. Leaving rates as they are gives the Fed headroom for further action if more serious risks arise. Interest rates are already low, and further cuts may have little impact. However, the 2020 presidential election is only a year away. If the economy were to fall into a major slowdown or even recession, this would be a serious problem for President Trump’s reelection efforts. Pressure for a rate cut to supercharge growth or limit any downturn is very desirable from a purely political perspective.

The problems created by the President’s U.S.-China trade war are not of little moment. There is near universal agreement that the President’s trade policy has been somewhat to very negative on global economic growth. The Fed is well aware of the decline in positive sentiment from shareholders, customers, suppliers, workers, and communities. The forever trade war may become a fixture for some time to come.

Shadowing all these issues is the widening U.S. deficit that topped $1T in the first eleven months of the fiscal year. This is the first time year-to-date fiscal deficits have topped that amount in seven years. Government spending climbed 7% to $4.1T, outpacing federal tax receipts which grew 3% to $3.1T. The last time deficits were growing at the same rate, the U.S. was attempting to climb out of a deep recession. Currently, no serious policy exists for reducing the deficit at a time when interest rate costs for servicing debt are at near historic lows.