Fed will tip U.S. economy ‘into a recession by the end of next year’: Deutsche Bank economist

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Deutsche Bank Securities Chief U.S. Economist Matthew Luzzetti joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss why the Deustsche Bank is the first major bank to call for a recession in 2023 as the Fed pivots to fighting inflation.

Video Transcript

AKIKO FUJITA: OK, Brian, let's bring in another voice into the conversation here. We've got Matthew Luzzetti, Deutsche Bank Securities Chief US Economist. And, Matthew, you've gotten a lot of attention over the last few days on the back of that note you put out calling for a recession. We're talking about 2023 right now, but talk to me about what you saw in the Fed minutes yesterday and how that connects the dots for you when you think about the recession at the end of 2023.

MATTHEW LUZZETTI: Sure. First, thanks so much for having me. I think what we heard from the Fed minutes yesterday was kind of a continuation of what we've heard from Fed speak in recent weeks, which is it has been meaningfully more hawkish, it has been, I think, more worried about the inflation outlook. There was a paragraph in those minutes where it was kind of some of the most concerned and hawkish messaging that I've heard around inflation in quite some time from the Fed-- them being worried that price pressures are being pushed on without hurting demand, worried about the inflation dynamics in the economy possibly changing relative to what we saw pre-COVID, and really worried about the broadening of price pressures that we've seen.

And so I view it as a continuation of what we've heard from the Fed, what we've heard from Chair Powell. And what it means to us is that the Fed has said inflation fighting is their number one goal today. It will mean that they will be much more hawkish. They're going to be raising rates aggressively, they're going to be doing quantitative tightening, as Brian just laid out. And those two things, we think, next year puts them into a restrictive stance which ultimately tips the economy into recession by the end of next year.

BRIAN CHEUNG: Can you just explain for us exactly how that would happen? Because a lot of economists are saying, well, the Fed is eventually going to have to cut interest rates-- that could be at the end of 2023 into the beginning of 2024. What does that actually do to the economy? Because the people that are watching the show might only understand it in terms of, do I have a job and are prices going up at the store?

MATTHEW LUZZETTI: Absolutely. And that's essentially the Fed's dual mandate. And so I think it's good to consider what we're looking at today within that context, both inflation and the labor market. And today, what we are seeing is inflation at 40-year highs. We're seeing a labor market which is historically tight-- tight to an extent that Chair Powell actually called it unhealthy how tight it is.