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Gold Wonders How Severe This Recession Will Be

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Economic contraction is unfolding – but how painful will it be? The deeper the recession, the better for gold.

Arkadiusz SierońBullion.Directory precious metals analysis 12 September, 2022
By Arkadiusz Sieroń, PhD

Lead Economist and Overview Editor at Sunshine Profits

Let’s make it clear: an economic downturn is coming. We are already in a technical recession (GDP contracted in the first two quarters of this year), despite the White House’s attempts to change its definition.

A full-blown recession is just around the corner and will likely come out next year. At this point, another question is more interesting: how long will the pain last? Or, how deep will the contraction be? Will it be a short and shallow recession like in 1990-91 or in 2001, or a long and severe one like the Great Recession?

Or maybe a short but deep one like the pandemic recession of 2020?

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I don’t know . I forgot to take my crystal ball. However, I would exclude the last possibility, as the latest recession was mainly caused by the Great Lockdown – this is why it was so deep and short. This recession will be more normal – as long as recessions have anything to do with normality.

Actually, this won’t be a normal recession, as it will be accompanied by high inflation, which implies that we will experience stagflation. This is a strong argument for a deep recession. Why?

Well, the Fed is already engineering a recession (although Powell prefers talking about bringing demand and supply into balance) to slow inflation.

Given how high inflation remains and how long the U.S. central bank has been in denial and inaction, it will have to continue its unprecedentedly large interest rate hikes. Such an aggressive tightening cycle could lead to a serious economic decline.

This is also what history suggests. There was no period of such high inflation that didn’t lead to a severe recession. There was a long recession in 1973-1975 and later a double-dip recession in the early 1980s.

The recession of 1990-91 was milder, but inflation was lower, while the Fed’s reaction to it was faster.

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Another argument that strengthens the pessimistic view is the size of monetary stimulus during the boom phase of this business cycle. The broad money supply increased by more than one fourth in 2020 in a response to the pandemic (see the chart below), as the central and commercial banks created trillions of dollars to tranquilize the population into accepting lockdowns.

However, the higher the flight, the more painful the fall will be.

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Last but not least, there is a lot of debt accumulated in the economy. The public debt is $30.6 trillion, or 124.7% of GDP, and there is also the private debt, which is actually larger than the public.

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Thanks to recent declines, asset valuations are less stretched, but the financial system remains fragile. It’s true that banks are now in better shape than before the financial crisis of 2007-2009 and that they were rather unaffected by the pandemic.

Hence, the replay of the Great Recession – when banks were severely hit, which resulted in a credit crunch – doesn’t have to occur.

However, there is so much debt that hikes in interest rates and withdrawal of liquidity in the form of quantitative tightening – not to mention any sudden events – could trigger a financial crash or an economic crisis.

What does it all mean for the gold market?

Well, the mild recession, not to mention a soft landing, would be a relatively negative scenario for the yellow metal.

It could still gain somewhat, but markets are forward-looking and when a recession is shallow, they would anticipate a quick recovery (which would rather support equities and other risky assets).

The mild recession would also allow the Fed to stay relatively calm and to not fire all the monetary ammunition – while gold would prefer the U.S. central bank to go fully dovish.

On the other hand, a deep recession would be much better for gold. During severe economic downturns, moods are really pessimistic, and risk aversion is high.

Hence, investors shift into safe-haven assets such as gold. What’s more, the Fed would then break out all available weapons to avoid a full economic catastrophe, even in the face of high inflation. This would create excellent conditions for gold to rally.

If a deep recession is accompanied by a financial crisis or sovereign-debt crisis, when confidence in a financial system and fiat money is ultra low, it would be a really perfect scenario for the yellow metal.

Which scenario is most likely?

Given how high inflation is and how (relatively) aggressive the Fed’s tightening cycle is in response to price instability – the federal funds rate is historically still low, but the increase from 0-0.25 to 2.25-2.50% is huge in percentage terms (1800%) – I bet on a deep recession.

It’s true that the boom phase was short, so not many malinvestments had time to show up, but there are many erroneous projects accumulated in the 2010s that were never corrected (some analysts even say about everything bubble).

A lot will depend on the path of inflation. If inflation decelerates relatively quickly and to an acceptable level, the Fed could announce a triumph over the inflationary beast (at least in the first battle) and reverse or at least pause interest rate hikes.

Then, a recession could be relatively mild while its support for gold is positive but limited. However, if inflation remains stubbornly high, the Fed could continue its hiking cycle, which could trigger a potentially severe recession and make gold shine really bright.

Arkadiusz Sierońbullion.directory author Arkadiusz Sieroń

Arkadiusz Sieroń – is a certified Investment Adviser, long-time precious metals market enthusiast, Ph.D. candidate and a free market advocate who believes in the power of peaceful and voluntary cooperation of people.

He is an economist and board member at the Polish Mises Institute think tank, a Laureate of the 6th International Vernon Smith Prize and the author of Sunshine Profits’ bi-weekly Fundamental Gold Report and monthly Gold Market Overview.

This article was originally published here

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