Recession clouds darken 2007 outlook
Long time sine I wrote the last lines of my last article... consider it a X-mas break. Now we'r back on track, and this time is to write a little bit about U.S. slowdown and how it can turn into recession.
The recent trend of slower growth is not expected to be reversed any time soon. Home building and the broader real estate market are both already in a recession by most accounts and are expected to stay there well into next year. Manufacturing could soon follow.
Most economists expect slower growth and no downturn, but some recent signals are flashing red.
The economy is stumbling at the end of 2006, setting off alarm bells that growth might not just slow next year but that the nation could tumble into a recession.
The recent trend of slower growth is not expected to be reversed any time soon. Home building and the broader real estate market are both already in a recession by most accounts and are expected to stay there well into next year. Manufacturing could soon follow.
While most traders are still expecting the economy to avoid a full-blown downturn next year, many of us say (at least) the odds of a recession have risen.
Even the more optimistic analysts are looking for a slowdown in growth in gross domestic product (GDP) to between 2 and 3 percent next year, from 3 percent or better this year.
Many don't think there'll be a recession, but at least you have to have to have in mind, as we do, that the risks have risen.
Some of the Christmas spending wasn't as strong as anyone'd hope, and I think we have not reached the bottom in housing yet.
With the yield curve in the shape it is now, the economy is more susceptible to shocks. For example, if oil went to $80 a barrel, or there was a sharp drop in the dollar, the U.S. could fall into recession, in my opinion with no chnce of recovery.
Not all declines in manufacturing lead to recession. But if the economy is going to go down, it's going to be led by manufacturing and construction.
On the other hand, others look at continued strength in consumer spending, even at the end of a year that saw record energy prices, coupled with low unemployment and rising exports and they say the chance of a recession next year is pretty slim.
So as I usually say, now it's your turn to look at this situation and think. You can always add some feedback to the article... hope you do!!
Till my next post.
Happy New Year and my best wishes.
Cheers to you all.
Labels: bet, currency, dollar, economy, FOREX, gap, money, recession, slowdown, trade, U.S.
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