Will Australia plunge into a recession?

AMP economist Diana Mousina gives her prediction on whether disaster looms for both ASX shares and the general population.

| More on:

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More

With inflation raging and central banks playing catch-up with interest rate hikes, there's just one question on everyone's lips.

Is a recession coming?

The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) raised its cash rate by 75 basis points over the past few weeks and is expected to continue pushing it up until at least spring.

The worry is that by hiking rates so fast to stamp out inflation, the RBA might slow the economy so much that it actually goes backwards.

The traditional definition of a recession is when the gross domestic product contracts for two consecutive quarters.

And a recession would be pretty lousy for ASX shares. Demand for goods and services from listed companies would plummet, causing earnings to decline.

So will it happen?

AMP Ltd (ASX: AMP) economist Diana Mousina took a stab at answering this.

A woman sits at her computer with her hands clutched her the bottom of her face as though she may be biting her fingermails with a worried expression in her eyes and frown lines visible.

Image source: Getty Images

Signs are bad for a US recession

In the long run, inflation is poison to economic growth, which is why central banks are so keen to stamp it out.

But in the short term, the rate rises will slow down activity.

Mousina's team has revised its global growth expectations downwards multiple times this year.

"We expect global growth of around 3% in 2022 (in purchasing power parity terms) and just under 3% in 2023," she said on the AMP blog.

"This is a big downgrade to expectations, given that global growth was expected to be over 4% at the start of the year."

The typical indicators for a recession seem to be flashing red for the US.

The government bond yield curve has inverted over there and US stocks are in a bear market after crashing 24% since the early-year highs.

"Usually bear markets — when shares fall by 20% and keep falling — tend to be accompanied by recessions," said Mousina.

"The odds of a recession are larger in 2023 than in 2022 because central banks will need to take interest rates higher (and potentially too high) to get on top of elevated inflation which could cause the downturn."

Advance Australia fair

What about in Australia though?

"The 75 basis points worth of interest rate hikes so far have already started to dampen economic activity, with further declines in home prices, a fall in consumer sentiment and some slowing in weekly consumer credit card spending," said Mousina.

"The high inflation environment — especially on essentials like electricity, gas, petrol and food — is also adding to weakness in consumer spending."

In light of more interest rate rises over the next six months, the AMP team has further downgraded Australia's growth forecast.

"We now expect GDP growth to rise by ~2.7% over the year to December 2022 (well down from ~4% expected early this year) and 2.5% year on year to December 2023," said Mousina.

"We see the unemployment rate rising back over 4% in late 2023, after bottoming at 3.5% later this year."

However, the good news is that Mousina sees enough positives for Australia to stay out of recession territory.

"Consumers have a buffer of accumulated savings from the last 2.5 years of fiscal and monetary stimulus and low spending on services (worth $250bn)," she said.

"The pipeline of residential construction work still to be done is ~40% above pre-COVID levels which will add to economic growth, the business investment outlook is the best that it's been at for years with mining investment set to rise by +16% in 2023 and non-mining by +17%."

Mousina also noted both federal and state governments are implementing "growth-friendly policies" such as infrastructure and childcare spending. 

"And the outlook for exports — especially for commodities — is solid given the current commodity supply issues."

ASX shares are yet to fall into a bear market, according to Mousina, losing just 15% since their early-year peak.

She warns more pain could come for investors in the coming few months. But, once inflation is under control, ASX shares will be the place to be.

"We remain more optimistic on Australian shares versus US or Europe because of the higher exposure to commodities in our sharemarket, which remain in an uptrend, and less tech shares, which tend to perform worse as interest rates/bond yields rise."

Motley Fool contributor Tony Yoo has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia's parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

More on Economy

a woman
Broker Notes

5 ASX 200 shares that inflation can't touch: expert

Regardless of whether you're a bull or a bear, cost pressures are a factor when buying stocks at the moment.

Read more »

woman holding man's hand as he falls representing ups and downs of ASX investing
Share Market News

Why is the ASX 200 taking a tumble today?

The ASX 200 is sliding today after rallying yesterday on the back of the RBA’s 0.25% interest rate hike announcement.

Read more »

A man sits wide-eyed at a desk with a laptop open and holds one hand to his forehead with an extremely worried look on his face as he reads news of the Bitcoin price falling today on his mobile phone
Share Market News

ASX 200 lifts off as RBA raises interest rates yet again

With inflation still running hot, the RBA has increased the benchmark interest rate by another 0.25%, bringing the official cash…

Read more »

A woman sits on her lounge in front of her laptop looking concerned.
Share Market News

What can ASX 200 investors expect from the next RBA interest rate decision?

February marked the ninth consecutive month of interest rate hikes in the RBA’s ongoing struggle to bring inflation back within…

Read more »

A young couple look upset as they use their phones.
Economy

Big bomb to explode on Tuesday for ASX shares: economists

The economy could slow considerably and company earnings could take a painful hit.

Read more »

Senior man wearing glasses and a leather jacket works on his laptop in a cafe.
Share Market News

ASX 200 leaps higher on latest GDP and inflation news

The ABS just released the latest data on Australia’s economic growth and monthly inflation figures.

Read more »

Group of thoughtful business people with eyeglasses reading documents in the office.
Investing Strategies

4 ways interest rates could go and what they mean for ASX shares: expert

How will the central banks influence your stocks in 2023? Here are the possibilities, ranging from a nightmare to a…

Read more »

Woman sitting at a desk shrugs.
Share Market News

Why did the ASX 200 leap higher on rising unemployment data?

The seasonally adjusted unemployment rate increased from 3.5% to 3.7% in January.

Read more »