GLOBAL ECONOMICS AND POLITICS

Leo Haviland provides clients with original, provocative, cutting-edge fundamental supply/demand and technical research on major financial marketplaces and trends. He also offers independent consulting and risk management advice.

Haviland’s expertise is macro. He focuses on the intertwining of equity, debt, currency, and commodity arenas, including the political players, regulatory approaches, social factors, and rhetoric that affect them. In a changing and dynamic global economy, Haviland’s mission remains constant – to give timely, value-added marketplace insights and foresights.

Leo Haviland has three decades of experience in the Wall Street trading environment. He has worked for Goldman Sachs, Sempra Energy Trading, and other institutions. In his research and sales career in stock, interest rate, foreign exchange, and commodity battlefields, he has dealt with numerous and diverse financial institutions and individuals. Haviland is a graduate of the University of Chicago (Phi Beta Kappa) and the Cornell Law School.


 

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AMERICAN ECONOMIC GROWTH: CYCLES, YIELD SPREADS, AND STOCKS © Leo Haviland March 4, 2019

In “Back in the U.S.A.”, Chuck Berry sings: “Yes, I’m so glad I’m livin’ in the U.S.A. Anything you want, we got right here in the U.S.A.”

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OVERVIEW AND CONCLUSION

Marketplace and other cultural analysts create meaningful relationships between variables and groups of phenomena. As subjective perspectives differ, these faithful inquirers identify, define, select, assess, and organize evidence (data; facts; factors) in a variety of fashions. This results in diverse propositions, arguments, and conclusions, and thus an array of competing stories.

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In its discussion of America’s 4Q18 GDP growth, the NYTimes (3/1/19, pB1) stated that “most economists do not expect a recession this year.”

America’s current economic expansion is very long by historical standards. Of course history need not repeat itself. Conditions, including associations and patterns between variables, can and do change over time. Marketplace convergence and divergence trends (and lead/lag relationships) are not inevitable; they can shift, sometimes dramatically. However, devoted study of the ongoing economic expansion should not divorce itself from previous economic growth and decline episodes and patterns.

Interest rate yield relationships offer insight into economic history and prospects. Particularly given the remarkable length of America’s recent glorious real GDP expansion, marketplace clairvoyants should review the long run historical relationship between yields for lower-grade United States corporate bonds and the ten year US Treasury note in the context of American economic growth and recession cycles. The recent widening yield spread trend for this credit relationship warns that a US recession (or at least significantly lower growth than generally forecast), whether in calendar 2019 or not long thereafter, is more likely than most wizards anticipate. Moreover, current trends in the US Treasury yield curve, when placed in historic perspective, also underline the looming potential for an American economic downturn (or considerably slower growth than most soothsayers predict).

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American Economic Growth- Cycles, Yield Spreads, and Stocks (3-4-19)