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Market recession indicators: dissecting the signal from the noise

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By Dhara Ranasinghe and Stefano Rebaudo

LONDON (Reuters) – Global recession risks have shot back up markets’ worry list, but the readout from economic data and key financial indicators is not as clear cut as it first appears.

A 90-day pause on most reciprocal tariffs unveiled by U.S. President Donald Trump in April has eased investors’ worst fears, but the damage to business and consumer confidence is expected to hurt.

“Recession risks have risen markedly even if there are some deals struck on tariffs,” said Guy Miller, chief markets strategist at Zurich Insurance Group. “The risk of a U.S. recession is 50-50, it’s that close.”

Here’s a look at what some closely-watched indicators say about global recession risks.

1/ HARD VS SOFT

A disconnect between so-called soft economic numbers such as sentiment indicators and hard data, for instance jobs figures, makes it hard to decipher recession risks.

Latest U.S. jobs numbers point to a resilient economy, while a first quarter economic contraction in the United States and an expansion in the euro zone have both been explained away by pre-positioning by companies ahead of the reciprocal tariffs.

Business and consumer confidence indicators meanwhile have deteriorated, a sign for some that weaker growth will materialise soon.

U.S. consumer confidence slumped to a nearly five-year low in April. Consumer spending is key because it accounts for more than two-thirds of U.S. economic activity. A euro zone investor morale index has rebounded after nose-diving in April but remains in negative territory.

“We assume that any contraction in the euro area would be short lived and relatively mild,” said MUFG senior economist Henry Cook.

Zurich’s Miller said he was watching initial weekly jobless claims as the most timely indicator of what’s happening in the U.S. economy.

2/ CHANGE YOUR MIND

There’s no getting away from slashed growth forecasts.

Economists polled by Reuters indicate high risks of a recession this year, having forecast strong growth just three months ago.

Barclays reckons the picture is one of a meaningful global slowdown, combined with mild U.S. and euro area recessions.

Yet a recession is not a done deal, economists say. If the U.S. can arrange trade deals soon or deliver on tax cuts, the risks would fall, while the euro zone economy will likely be buffered by lower rates and fiscal stimulus.

“A recovery of consumer spending due to higher wages and a more dovish than expected central bank, at least in the euro area, are the main factors helping to avoid a deep recession,” said BofA economist Ruben Segura-Cayuela.

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