What Mattered This Quarter? Rates, Recession, and Politics

Published 04/03/2023, 03:17 AM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM

It has been an eventful first quarter of the year. When we started 2023, expectations were for a recession in fairly short order, for markets to continue to tank, and for the news to remain bad. Instead, we end the quarter in a much better place than we started. Economic growth is significantly positive. Markets are up, with the Nasdaq now in a new bull market. And while there have been significant negative events—the banking crisis comes to mind—the actual effects we see from those events are not that bad.

Given that big picture, what mattered this quarter? I would call out three things.

Interest Rates Stabilize

First, interest rates peaked and pulled back. Interest rates spiked at the start of the year and again at the beginning of March on fears about the Fed. But in each case, they pulled back as they did toward the end of last year. With the Fed signaling the end of the rate hiking in the next couple of meetings, with the banking crisis generating significant financial tightening over the next several months, and with the recession supposedly coming, that move makes sense.

But it also represents a significant shift in the economic environment and investor perceptions. Rising rates generate caution across the board; stable (or even declining) rates allow businesses to plan and invest. Stable rates mean stock valuations are more stable, allowing growing earnings to increase stock prices and explaining at least part of the positive start to the year. This quarter saw a shift from a negative backdrop to at least a neutral one.

Recession Hasn’t Happened (Yet)

The second thing that mattered is the recession that didn’t happen. You could add “yet” to that, and there are signs that a recession is likely later this year. But the continued strength in a wide range of economic indicators—job growth and consumer confidence at the head of the list—has been noteworthy this quarter. That outperformance against expectations matters because it raises the chances it will continue and, again, has started to turn a negative environment to a positive one.

Politics Didn’t Derail Markets

The third and last thing that has happened has been politics. Again, we started the year with multiple worries, including the Ukraine war, the Chinese Covid-19 shutdown, and the debt ceiling confrontation here in the U.S. Two of those issues are still with us, and the Chinese Covid-19 worry has been replaced with a China/U.S. confrontation. But markets have accommodated those worries. Even the pending presidential election, with all the theater associated with that, hasn’t shaken markets. Overall, again, we end the quarter in a better place—at least emotionally.

What Really Mattered

So, what mattered this quarter was really what didn’t happen. Interest rates didn’t continue to march upward. The economy didn’t fall into a recession. And politics did not derail either the economy or markets. As I mentioned the other day, despite the headlines, what has mattered is that the dogs simply are not barking about the problems.

That can change, of course. Many of those problems are still out there and could come back and bite us. But the real thing that mattered this quarter is that the U.S. worker and consumer continued to do well, work more, make more money, feel confident, and spend. As long as that positive news continues, it will be the dominant factor for everything else. Right now? The signs are still good.

DisclaimerCertain sections of this commentary contain forward-looking statements that are based on our reasonable expectations, estimates, projections, and assumptions. Forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and involve certain risks and uncertainties, which are difficult to predict. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Diversification does not assure a profit or protect against loss in declining markets. All indices are unmanaged and investors cannot invest directly into an index. Member FINRA/SIPC. Commonwealth Financial Network®.

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