Recession Risk Rising

A portion of the yield curve inverts … a recession is “unavoidable” unless this one thing happens … a no-brainer sector that will boost your portfolio for years to come

The macroeconomic clues continue pointing toward a recession.

But if that makes you want to hunker down and lock up your wallet, hold on.

There are some great long-term buying opportunities in today’s market.

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To explain, let’s begin with the macroeconomic situation with the help of legendary investor Louis Navellier.

From his Platinum Growth Club Flash Alert from yesterday:

The biggest news right now is the yield curve has inverted twice this week.

Before we continue, a quick clarification:

The yield-curve inversions Louis references are not what we’ve been tracking here in the Digest. We’ve been monitoring the 10-year Treasury yield relative to the two-year Treasury yield.

This 10/2 comparison is the most widely-referenced part of the yield curve. It’s also the one that, historically, is a highly-reliable predictor of recessions and economic downturns.

Bank of America notes that an inverted 10/2 curve has preceded the last eight recessions. If we go further back in time, the inversion has preceded 10 out of the last 13 recessions.

We have not yet seen a 10/2 inversion, though we’re only 20 basis points away as I write. That said, the inversions that Louis references are not good signs.

(If you’re a newer Digest reader and unfamiliar with yield curves and their significance, click here for a past issue that explains those details.)

Back to Louis’ update:

We have dramatically rising interest rates but we also have a remarkably flat-to-slightly-inverted yield curve.

As we’ve noted here in the Digest, this is an awful, rock-and-a-hard-place position for the Fed.

If they push rates high enough to squelch out today’s runaway inflation, it greatly increases the odds of slamming the brakes on the U.S. economy, sending us into a recession.

But if the Fed moves slower on rate hikes, it’s likely that inflation will continue to wreak havoc on the monthly budgets of Main Street Americans.

This is the Fed’s tightrope to walk.