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Byline: Ruchir Sharma; Sharma is head of global emerging markets for Morgan Stanley Investment Management.
Apart from the financial sector, U.S. firms are in fairly good health, with profit margins close to record highs.
Market pessimism knows no bounds, and now it's literally running off the charts. The word "recession" is showing up in the business press at a rate not seen even in the trough of the tech boom-bust cycle earlier this decade. The cognoscenti are liberally using macabre phrases such as "deflationary death spiral" and "Armageddon cometh" in their prognoses for the future of the United States economy.
Surveys find that fund managers are underinvested and hording cash at levels last held in the immediate aftermath of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Hedge funds, too, are in complete retreat, with record low exposure to the market. Meanwhile, retail investors in the United States haven't been this bearish on stocks since 1990. According to the popular betting Web site Intrade.com, the probability of a recession in the United States this year is nearly 70 percent.
All this pessimism comes despite data that still do not indicate that the United States has entered a recession. Trends in employment, retail sales and industrial production show domestic demand has indeed slowed to a crawl, but is far from falling off the cliff. In addition, export growth remains robust and is on track to add almost a percentage point to U.S. GDP in 2008. While it's true that some of the data tend to lag behind current economic activity, so do the opinions of economists and the commentariat. In the past, they have not been able to distinguish a cyclical slowdown from a recession until the economy is midway into the event.
So either history is going to be turned on its head this time, with the consensus announcing a recession well before it has arrived, or all the current fuss is going to seem like a bit of a hoax. At the moment, the latter outcome looks more likely.
While it's hard to deny that the United States is in the throes of a full-blown credit crisis, a look back at similar episodes in the developed world and a closer examination of the wider economy suggest that the United States is well poised to skirt a recession. The typical conditions that cause a recession, from inflation to widespread investment excesses in capital spending, do not currently exist. Furthermore, past credit crises have not always led to economic slumps. In fact, though many today forget it, even the Japanese economy expanded 1.5 percent a year during the 1990s till the Asian financial crisis.