Deutsche Bank predicts US recession next year as Fed hikes rates

Under the forecast, US unemployment would rise sharply to 4.9 per cent in 2024. PHOTO: AFP

WASHINGTON (BLOOMBERG) - The United States will tumble into a recession next year as the Federal Reserve jacks up interest rates to combat high and widening inflation, Deutsche Bank economists David Folkerts-Landau and Peter Hooper said in a report on Tuesday (April 5).

They see the Fed raising rates by 50 basis points at each of its next three meetings on its way to a peak above 3.5 per cent by the middle of next year. The Fed's current target for the federal funds rate is 0.25 per cent to 0.5 per cent, after it lifted off levels near zero last month.

Deutsche Bank is one of the first major banks to forecast a US recession. Goldman Sachs Group economists led by Jan Hatzius said in a report on Monday that an economic downturn was "far from inevitable", in part because consumers and companies are "flush" with cash.

"Our call for a recession in the US next year is currently way out of consensus," Mr Folkerts-Landau and Mr Hooper acknowledged in their report, adding, "We expect it will not be so for long."

On top of the Fed rate increases, Deutsche forecasts the US central bank will reduce its US$8.9 trillion (S$12.1 trillion) balance sheet by almost US$2 trillion by the end of next year, the equivalent of three or four additional twenty-five basis point hikes.

"The US economy is expected to take a major hit from the extra Fed tightening by late next year and early 2024," Mr Folkerts-Landau and Mr Hooper wrote in the report, entitled Over The Brink.

Under the forecast, US unemployment rises sharply to 4.9 per cent in 2024. Joblessness in March clocked in at 3.6 per cent.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note is seen climbing to 3.3 per cent this year while stocks suffer a "transitory decline on the order of 20 per cent" by the summer of 2023 as the recession takes hold.

Mr Folkerts-Landau is group chief economist.

Former Fed official Mr Hooper is global head of economic research.

While Deutsche Bank is among the first major banks to predict a recession, many finance professionals are coming to the view that a downturn is likely as the Fed tightens credit, according to a recent survey by Bloomberg.

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