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A US recession indicator flashes red for Leuthold’s Paulsen

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TOKYO: One gauge of recession risk with a “pretty good” track record over the last half century has just raised a cautionary signal, according to the Leuthold Group.

For the first time since just prior to the 20072009 recession, premiums on the lowest-rated tranche of investment-grade US corporate bonds have risen to 2% after being below that level, according to data compiled by the Minneapoli­s-based research group.

The analysis looks at the gap in yields between corporate debt rated Baa by Moody’s Investors Service and those on 10-year Treasuries.

“We are not sure why a 2% credit spread has been so prescient in predicting recessions since 1970,” Jim Paulsen, Leuthold’s chief investment strategist, wrote in a note to clients on Monday.

That happened either during or prior to six of the past seven recessions, he said.

Paulsen was quick to acknowledg­e that other gauges of recession risk aren’t sending the same signal.

One of the more famous is an inversion in the Treasury yield curve, when two-year yields exceed those on 10-year notes, but that hasn’t happened yet.

The particular investment-grade premium highlighte­d by Paulsen also has been well above 2% for practicall­y the entire period of economic expansion since the end of the great recession. “This less-followed indicator has a good enough relationsh­ip with recession risk during the last 50 years that it should not be ignored,” he wrote.

Given that the “subpar” economic recovery has relied on unconventi­onal monetary policy and fiscal stimulus, “would it be shocking if it ended before traditiona­l recession indicators provided warnings,” he wrote.

Fears of accelerati­ng inflation and a faster pace of Federal Reserve interest-rate hikes have weighed on investment-grade corporate bonds so far this year.

In addition, US firms are borrowing more and their interest costs are increasing.

The spread between the Moody’s Corporate Baa Bond Index and 10-year Treasuries rose to 2% on June 28, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

It stood at 1.96% last Friday. — Bloomberg

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