Energy & Precious Metals - Weekly Review and Outlook

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By Barani Krishnan

Investing.com -- Is a U.S. recession inevitable and what will it do to the price of oil?

Weekly jobless claims among Americans have hit five-month highs while sales of existing homes are down a fifth straight month amid a nine-month low in homebuilding. These are signs of trouble in the labor and housing markets — the other two principal drivers of inflation in America, besides oil.

On the energy front, U.S. crude oil prices have fallen three weeks in a row, losing 13% in that stretch. Brent Crude finished in the green last week but not before losing 17% over five straight weeks. At the pumps, U.S. gasoline was at $4.38 a gallon across the country as of July 23, down from last month’s peak of more than $5 a gallon.

To top it all, the Federal Reserve will likely impose a 75-basis point hike for July at its monthly rate decision on Wednesday. If so, it will be the second straight 75-bps hike that will take rates from a range of 0-0.25% in February to 2.25-2.50% by the end of this month. With three more rate decisions left for this year, Fed officials are indicating a high-end of 3.5% or even 4% for rates by the year-end. But money market traders are also pricing in rate cuts by 2023 with the implicit prediction the economic fallout from the Fed hikes will not be too great.

That the market is even contemplating a fresh easing by next year tells economists that the risk of a Fed-induced recession between now and then is reasonably high. The U.S. economy has already contracted 1.6% in the first quarter and a second quarter in the red is all that’s needed to technically call a recession.

US tax data at least suggests that aggregate labor income — reflecting gains in wages, hiring and incentive pay across the economy — has hit an inflection point, and that labor income is now shrinking in real terms, making a job market slowdown more likely.

Matt Trivisonno, who tracks tax withholdings for investors at DailyJobsUpdate.com, has been quoted as saying that he expects the 372,000 jobs gained in June “to be revised away in the future", with the possibility of "a nasty reversal" in monthly jobs data.

But again, if there’s a recession, what impact will it have on the energy sector itself?

As President Joe Biden announced from the White House on Friday, although gas prices have been falling for more than 30 days straight — since the start of summer, he said — the national average is still substantially higher than a year ago, when it was at $3.16 a gallon. Diesel prices are also averaging $5.46 a gallon as of July 22, just marginally down from last month’s $5.81.