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How the rapid inflation spike can cause a recession shock - and what that means for your portfolio.

In This Article:

Today, I'm breaking down how policy and inflation are weighing on major stock indexes — but first, let's start with a separate matter.

Among some of my colleagues, there's been chatter about President Biden's student loan forgiveness plan. Some feel relieved; others confused.

Specific to us markets folks, though, there is a stock market angle to this story.

Experts say that while it may free up cash for millions of Americans, the $300 billion move won't spark a stock-buying spree like the pandemic stimmy checks did. Still, as a form of stimulus not totally unlike free money, there could be some heightened inflows into stocks.

You can read the full analysis here.

And one more thing before we begin: Everyone's talking about "quiet quitting" right now. Conan O'Brien's assistant Sona Movsesian told The Refresh from Insider how she's been doing it for over a decade. Listen to her talk about doing the "minimal amount of work possible."

Okay, let's get to today's market updates.


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Joe Biden
Joe Biden

1. The fast inflation spike is leading to a slow recession shock, and Bank of America said that can push the stock market to new lows.

The firm's analysts expect stocks to crumble and Treasury yields to pop following Jerome Powell's hawkish and brief remarks in Wyoming.

"Jackson Hole marked the end of 'Mission Accomplished' summer trade of peak CPI, peak yields, [and expected] Fed cuts in 2023," BofA said in a Friday note.

The combination of inflation, fiscal stimulus, and prior era of wealth accumulation — not to mention the new era of "economic cancel culture" — are set to tip the economy into a recession, the strategists noted.

All that has left BofA anticipating a bearish trajectory for the S&P 500 toward 3,300.

And Friday's "Goldilocks" jobs data suggests that more outsized rate hikes loom, too, according to ING, a move that would weigh further on the stock market.

Despite the economy being in a technical recession, ING analysts said, 3.5 million jobs were created.

Both ING and BlackRock's Rick Rieder forecasted that easing inflation can allow the Fed to slow its pace of rate hikes.

"The Fed has described a willingness, and in fact a desire to reduce demand in the system, with somewhat higher levels of unemployment as an offshoot of the need to address high and persistent levels of inflation head-on," Rieder said.