Recession ‘not imminent right now,’ market strategist says

Baird Managing Director & Market Strategist Michael Antonelli joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss stock futures amid the possibility of a recession.

Video Transcript

BRIAN SOZZI: Welcome back. You're seeing some of the markets under a little bit of pressure here in the pre-market. You see that 10-year yield going above 2.8%. You're seeing cryptocurrency prices under a little bit of pressure. Hence, you're seeing the Dow, the S&P 500, and the NASDAQ all in the red.

But let's chat more about these things. Michael Antonelli, Baird managing director and market strategist. Michael, great to see you, as always. So Julie and I've been going back and forth on this potential for a recession. Goldman Sachs out this morning with a pretty big call. What say you? Is a recession coming later this year? And is it in any way priced into markets?

MICHAEL ANTONELLI: First of all, great to see you guys back in the studio. Just, you just absolutely love to see it. Remember, whenever you see or hear in the media or from Wall Street odds of a recession, it's always between 35 and 40. Remember, that's the default rule. There's a reason why that's the case, but it's always 35 to 40. I don't think that we have a recession. I'm going to go in the no recession camp for this year.

Now when I lean into these kind of things, I think about the past, I think about evidence, I think about probabilities. If you use the yield curve inversion as your signal, which we all know is a pretty good signal, the shortest a yield curve inversion has led to a recession is six months. That was back in COVID. The longest is 33 months. The average is about 17 months. So unless you think that the recession is going to come faster than it did for COVID, it's somewhere out in 2023, possibly 2024.

So my thought would be right now, companies are hiring. Businesses are still expanding. People are working and spending money. You'll hear that employment is a lagging indicator, and it is, but you generally tend to see employment slow, going into a recession, and it's not slowing. So I don't think this year, if it happens to be somewhere out in the next year. 17 months from the inversion, so now you're talking somewhere into 2023, maybe into 2024. I just don't think it's imminent right now.

JULIE HYMAN: So Mike, that's the economic backdrop. Let's talk about what's happening in the markets because it feels like the last couple of weeks, there's been a shift of some kind, sentiment shift, a reactive shift. Do you see that shift? And what do you think is going on?

MICHAEL ANTONELLI: Boy, you look at some of the center reads. They're really bad. Like, they are really, really bad. The AAII data is at a level where recessions usually end. Bank of America puts out that fund manager survey. You're looking at cash overweight by a couple of standard deviations, equity underweight by a standard deviation. These are the kind of things you see when the news is as bad as it gets, and you're in a recession.