Home Bloomberg.com JPMorgan Model Shows Recession Fear in Markets Spiking Up to 79%

JPMorgan Model Shows Recession Fear in Markets Spiking Up to 79%

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JPMorgan Chase & Co. says recession fears in stocks acutely tied to America’s economy have spiked to nearly 80%, while credit investors remain sanguine even as funding stress threatens to build.

The small-cap focused Russell 2000, which has been battered in the recent selloff, is now pricing in a 79% chance of an economic downturn, according to JPMorgan’s dashboard of market-based recession indicators. Other asset classes are also sounding alarms: the S&P 500 is pricing in a 62% chance of an economic downturn, while base metals show a 68% chance and five-year Treasuries indicate a 54% chance. By contrast, recession odds in the investment-grade credit market are at just 25% — though that’s still up from zero in November.

Recession Worries Are Growing

Small caps, bonds and base metals show higher probability of contraction

Source: JPMorgan

Note: The bank calculates the metrics by comparing the pre-recession peaks of various classes and their troughs during previous economic contractions

Faith Based Events

“The Russell 2000, which as a more cyclical index should contain more information about the cyclical position of the US economy, prices in an average recession with high probability of almost 80%,” said JPMorgan strategist Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou. “A mild recession is almost 100% priced in.”

Economic sentiment is darkening as money managers and corporate executives struggle to cope with the volatility created by President Donald Trump’s escalating trade war. Equities on Tuesday reversed what was on track to be the biggest rally since 2022, after the White House said it would go ahead with tariffs of 104% on China. The S&P 500 fell almost 3%, leaving it flirting with a bear market.

JPMorgan calculates the prospect of an economic downturn by comparing the pre-recession peaks of various classes and their troughs during an economic contraction. One bullish implication for stocks is that the doom and gloom that’s already erased trillions of dollars from the asset class may have lowered the bar for a rebound fueled by better economic or policy news.

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This article originally appeared here and was republished with permission.

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