Morning Wire - 2024 Economic Forecast: Perspectives from a Bull & Bear | 1.14.24
Episode Date: January 14, 2024Two economic experts discuss their forecasts for the economy in 2024 including predictions on a possible recession, a housing market bubble, inflation and interest rates. Get the facts first on Mornin...g Wire. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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With a new year upon us, questions about the U.S. economy abound.
Will the housing market continue to stagnate?
Will interest rates finally return to normal?
Is Wall Street heading for a bear or bull market?
And what about inflation?
In this episode of Morning Wire, we'll pose these questions and more to two market experts
who each have very different outlooks for the year ahead.
I'm Daily Wire, editor-in-chief John Bickley with Georgia Howe.
It's January 14th, and this is a Sunday edition of Morning Wire.
Here to discuss where the U.S. economy is heading in 2024 as Daily Wire Senior Editor Cabot Phillips.
Hey, Cabot. So you spoke with two experts. So what did you learn?
Yeah, when it comes to predicting which way the economy is trending, nearly everyone seems to have their own opinion. Some say we're doomed for recession.
Others say we're out of the woods and headed for a year of growth. Some say the housing market is a bubble ready to pop. Others say it's set for a strong year and their rate cuts will get the market firing up once more.
With that in mind, I spoke with two market experts.
each with decades of experience for their thoughts on where we're heading.
First was Joe LaVorna, who served as chief economist at the National Economic Council
and is currently the head economist at SNBC.
LaVorna is more in the bear camp, predicting a sluggish year across the board.
The economic landscape is not good.
It hasn't been good, I'd argue, for some time.
But I certainly think it will be worse in a more traditional sense.
And what I mean by that is we are going to see job losses alongside a rising unemployment rates.
So the backdrop will deteriorate as we move through 2024.
So, no, I'm definitely bearish on the economy, and then by default, bearish on the stock market.
I also spoke with Kenny Pokhari, a market strategist and managing partner of case capital advisors.
Pokhari is a self-described bull on the economy, and while generally optimistic about 2024,
still does have some reservations.
I feel fairly good about the economy.
I'm a little bit cautious for the first quarter.
I think we've already started to see some concerning forward guidance coming out of places like FedEx and General Mills and Nike.
We saw that Walgreens cut their dividend by 50 percent.
That's not necessarily a positive.
You know, that's causing some angst, I think, in certain parts of the market.
And I think that that's legitimate.
For the first quarter, so I'm, I remain a little bit cautious.
Doesn't mean I think, you know, we're going to see the market crash or we're going to have this disaster happen.
But I don't think that at all.
But I am just cautious as we get into the.
first quarter of 50s, and then the next Fed meeting, which is the end of January,
to kind of get any more clarity if at all. And then I think if we moved through the year,
I think the market will stabilize. I don't think we're going to have this kind of returns
next year, this year that we had last year. Now, throughout the last year, one of the biggest
economic questions was whether we were heading for a recession. Well, that did not technically
materialize in 2023. There's still a debate about whether we're heading that way in
24. And our experts had slightly different outlooks on that question. For his part, Polkari believes
we're heading for the long-discussed soft landing this year. You know, we avoided the official
recession, right? They didn't call it because we didn't have, you know, in 2023, we didn't have those
two negative quarters. But remember, when we did have those two negative quarters at the end of
2022, they also refused to call it then. And then that was a classic definition of a recession,
yet they refused to call it because, you know, they weren't sure and all that stuff. So yes, in 23,
We didn't have the classic definition of it, but I think what we saw was I think we started
to see kind of rolling recessions in different industries as we went through the year,
which means I don't think in 2024 that we're going to get a full-blown recession reminiscent
of the 1980s, you know, where we went into a deep, dark recession for two years because
the Fed had a force rate to 21 percent to counteract, you know, what was resurging inflation.
I don't think we're going to see that.
Then I think, you know, we come in for a softer landing, not a crash landing, not a hard recession, but a softer landing.
I think there'll be bumps along the way.
It's not going to be perfect, but it's not going to be the disaster that maybe people thought it was going to be myself included, you know, at the beginning of last year.
But LaVornia is a bit less optimistic that a soft landing where rates slowly come down and employment and markets hold more or less steady is on the horizon.
We avoided a traditional recession in 22, but we have what I would call an inflationary recession,
in a sense that real GDP contracted. Now, at the time, the argument was, well, if you look at
the income side of the data, which is a corollary or a companion to the GDP data, which are more
known, the income data did not show the weakness, and many highlighted that in the administration,
for example, that the income numbers look solid. Well, if you look at the income numbers now,
they're actually telling us we're probably on the cusp of recession.
So I would say this backdrop is at best mix, and at worst, as they said, will be a downturn,
will be a recession in a more traditional sense.
The other thing that economists and everyday Americans for that part have been tracking is if
and when the Fed will finally begin to implement meaningful rate cuts.
Remember, we saw the fastest pace of rate hikes since the 1980s over the last two years,
as the Fed raised rates nearly a dozen times in their attempt to slow the economy.
economy and theoretically bring inflation down.
Fokari does not expect to see rates come down too quickly.
He predicted only minor tweaks here or there.
So could there have been a little tweak, maybe one, maybe two adjustments or cuts in rates
to get it back to the 5% level?
Sure, that I could see, but I was never of the mindset that they were cutting rates,
you know, five and six and seven times.
I am in the camp that if they're able to tweak them one or two,
By 25 basis points, right?
So maybe a half at the most.
I'm not even sure that that's true, maybe a quarter, I think, right?
But by no means do I think the economy needs five or six or seven rate cuts?
Because remember, when the Fed cuts rates, what are they doing?
They're stimulating the economy.
We don't need to be stimulated.
Unemployment is at 3.8%.
That's historic loans.
The economy is growing at a robust pace, according to all the data points at the Fed
and the government tells us. So there's no reason to stimulate it. But LaVorneux was a bit more optimistic on that front.
Oh, definitely. Rates will come down. He'll bond yields will fall, meaning prices will go up. But I do expect stock prices to go down. And the reason I expect stock prices to go down is they've always gone down when you've had a recession. They never not go down. We get debate about how much they'll go down. Maybe it'll be a mild recession. Maybe prices will go down only modestly. But if we have a recession, we have a recession, we have a recession. We have a recession. We have a recession.
have never not had stock prices move lower.
Now, one thing that's really important to remember here is that 2024 is an election year.
And traditionally, the Fed has refrained from raising or lowering rates too much for fear of impacting
the race during election years.
If rates come down and Americans begin to feel some relief, it would obviously help
President Biden ahead of November.
While Biden has not outright called on the Fed to cut rates saying he wants them to maintain
their independence, he has definitely hinted that he wants them to go in that direction.
However, other Democrats have been much more explicit in those calls.
Congressman Roe-Kana, for example, said last month that if Fed Chair Jerome Powell does not cut rates,
quote, he may be the most responsible for the possible return of Trump.
If rate cuts do begin in the economy benefits, don't be surprised if Trump says that it's part of a broader effort by the Fed to influence the election in Biden's favor.
Here's Pocari on the political implications of rate cuts this year.
We typically know history shows that the markets tend to do okay in a presidential election.
year. What the Fed should not be doing is they should not be adjusting monetary policy or
playing with rates six months ahead of the election for fear of being viewed as being political,
right? That they're trying to influence an election by using monetary policy and cutting rates
and or they could be raising rates. If they, you know, if they would try to get the incumbent
out, they'd raise rates and make the economy more difficult. In this case, if they're going to cut
rates, it would be viewed as being political. It would be viewed as supporting one side versus the
other, and that's exactly what they're not supposed to do, which is another reason why I thought
that whole five to seven rate cut thing was ridiculous, because the Fed would be called out and the
people would be calling the Fed out saying that they're becoming political, which I don't think
that they don't want to put themselves in that position. And here's LaVorna talking about the historical
significance of potential rate cuts during this election year. If the Fed does cut this year,
which I'm expecting, this will be the first time since at least 1984 where the Fed initiated rate cuts
in a presidential election year.
So this is a very different backdrop today
than we've had in very recent memory.
We wrapped up by talking about the housing market,
which exploded in 2021, 22,
but really ground to a halt last year as rates shot up
and inventory came to a historic standstill.
We've already seen mortgages come back in
from 8% where they were at the end of,
like in October when the 10-year was ticking
a little bit better than 5%.
So we've seen mortgages.
go from 8% back down to 6.5% now for 30-year conforming money. So that's been a positive.
And actually, again, you know, anywhere between 5% and 7% is also historically normal for mortgages,
right? Mortgages at 2% or 2.5% once again were abnormal. And so housing prices took off as a result
of money costing so cheap. What's going to have to happen is if mortgage rates stay where they are,
you're going to have to see some contraction in housing prices. You have to. They can't, they're just
unsustainable. People are not going to be able to afford it. And when it comes to fears of a collapse
in the housing market, Pocari said he thinks certain pockets of the country could see a bubble
getting ready to burst, but that nationally think should be a bit more stable. In parts of the
country, I think there is a housing bubble. Other parts of the country, I don't think ever got out of
whack, so there's less of a housing bubble. So I think you have to look at where that action is.
I think it's in some of the big cities. I don't know what's going on in Chicago. I can't imagine
housing prices of Chicago going up. But I know certainly in New York,
they are, you can see it. And in places where you've seen a mass migration, so whether it's
Texas, whether it's Florida, whether it's the Carolinas, where people moved away from either the
Northeast or high tax dates during COVID, whatever, that they moved to these other parts of the
country, that's where you saw it, and that's where you see more of a housing bubble, because there
was actually this new demand in housing. But I think that's going to start to settle down as well,
because I know certainly down here, they're starting to build once again like crazy down here.
and I live in South Florida.
And so I do think over time,
I don't think it's going to pop and crash like it did in 2007 and eight,
but I do think that in parts of the country,
there are certainly bubbles in housing.
So quite a few questions on the economy that remain unanswered,
but plenty of things to keep an eye on this year.
Yes, indeed.
Cabot, thanks for reporting.
Anytime.
That was Daily Wire, Senior editor, Cabot Phillips,
and this was a Sunday edition of Morning Wire.
