JPMorgan uses a proprietary economic model to forecast the probability of a recession.
The firm has provided wide-ranging asset allocation recommendations based on its recessionary forecast.
"Where are we in the cycle?"
It's an inquiry the economics team at JPMorgan receives frequently. And it's a good question when you consider that the US' current economic expansion is already the second-longest of the post-war era.
Luckily for any curious minds, JPMorgan maintains a model designed to provide the probability of a recession over one-, two-, and three-year periods. Putting it to work, the firm finds there's only a 18% chance of an economic meltdown over the next year, with those odds increasing to 52% (two years) and 72% (three years) over time.
Going off those findings, JPMorgan concludes that the economy is currently in the "twilight of the mid-cycle."
"The US economy has also yet to exhibit classic late-cycle characteristics, despite the expansion's advanced age," John Normand, head of cross-asset fundamental strategy at JPMorgan, wrote in a client note. "Business cycles do not succumb to age alone but rather to a confluence of factors like falling corporate profit margins, slowing productivity growth and a sharp rise in real policy rates into positive territory."
So what does this mean for investors right now? How should they be reacting to this information?
JPMorgan thinks the best strategy from an asset allocation perspective is to prepare for the inevitable shift into a late-cycle environment. Normand points out that different asset classes, sectors, and geographical regions outperform during different periods, and highlights the plentiful opportunities available during times of transition.
For starters, investors should be looking to reduce exposure to cyclical positions. Those types of holdings include being overweight the following areas: equities versus credit, emerging-market bonds versus developed-market, and financials and industrials versus defensive stocks.
Normand recommends the following areas (average quarterly late-cycle return in parentheses): utilities (8.8%), energy futures (7.7%), energy equities (6.7%), precious metals (4.9%), Treasury inflation protected securities (3.2%), and cash held in US dollars (2.4%).
Got all that? Now you're well-equipped to handle the shift into a late-cycle period.
Source: BI
Trader-G.Bozhidarov
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