Renowned economist Steve Hanke projects a downturn in the stock market, an impending recession, and a reduction in inflation to below 2% within this year.
Steve Hanke anticipates a market pullback, economic downturn, and a decrease in inflation to under 2% by year-end.
"Stocks, currently overvalued, are likely to depreciate as the recession's impact intensifies," stated Steve Hanke, a distinguished professor of applied economics at Johns Hopkins University, in a recent interview with Business Insider.
The S&P 500 index surged by 24% in 2023, approaching a record high. Stock valuations, often based on earnings multiples, are prone to decline during economic recessions due to reduced earnings and investor confidence, adversely affecting both corporate profits and investor sentiment.
Hanke, a former advisor to Ronald Reagan and past president of Toronto Trust Argentina during its 1995 peak performance, attributes recent inflation volatility primarily to fluctuations in the US money supply, rather than supply chain disruptions or changes in energy and metal prices.
In collaboration with John Greenwood, Hanke accurately projected in July 2021 that the headline Consumer Price Index (CPI) could soar to an annual rate of 9%, which it did a year later, peaking at 9.1%. They later predicted the CPI would drop to between 2% and 5% by December of the same year, aligning closely with the year-end figure of 3.4%.
"Following Milton Friedman's teachings, inflation is fundamentally a monetary issue," Hanke remarked. "Our forecasts, grounded in the quantity theory of money, have proven remarkably precise."
Hanke and Greenwood now foresee the headline inflation rate dipping below the Federal Reserve's 2% target by this year's end. They argued in the National Review that maintaining a 6% annual growth in M2, a comprehensive money supply measure, is key to keeping inflation around 2%.
In December, they emphasized the pivotal role of money as the economy's driving force, noting that significant changes in its supply can delay impacts on economic growth, spending, and inflation rates. They alerted that the US economy, with a significant reduction in its money supply since March 2022 following a historic 27% increase in the previous year due to COVID-19 stimulus measures, was likely headed towards a downturn.
Hanke has consistently sounded alarms about these issues. Last February, he warned of potential impacts on stocks due to declining corporate profits and output, and in August, he criticized investors for their complacency, foreseeing a looming market downturn and recession.
January 18, 2024