- Goldman Sachs has cut its probability forecast for a U.S. recession to 20% from 25%, shortly after raising it from 15%.
- After holding the odds at 15% for nearly a year, economists at Goldman — and elsewhere — were spooked by a weaker-than-expected July jobs report.
- However, retail sales and jobless claims readings since then have signficantly eased concerns the world's biggest economy is heading for a recession or is already in one.
Goldman Sachs has cut its probability forecast for a U.S. recession to 20% shortly after raising it, as fresh labor market data sparked a reassessment of market views on the economy.
Economists at Goldman earlier this month raised their 12-month U.S. recession probability from 15% to 25% after the U.S. July jobs report of Aug. 2 showed nonfarm payrolls grew by a less-than-expected 114,000. That was down from the downwardly revised 179,000 of June and below the Dow Jones estimate of 185,000.
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The report triggered widespread concerns about the world's largest economy, and contributed to the sharp — but ultimately brief — stock market sell-off at the start of the month.
It also triggered the "Sahm Rule," a historical indicator showing that the initial phase of a recession has begun when the three-month moving average of the U.S. unemployment rate is at least half a percentage point higher than the 12-month low.
Goldman initially cited this as a reason for hiking the probability of an economic downturn — but changed tack on Saturday, when it wrote in a note that it saw the odds down to 20% because data released since Aug. 2 showed "no sign of a recession."
Money Report
That included retail sales for July — which rose by 1%, versus an estimate of 0.3% — and weekly unemployment benefit claims, which were lower than expected.
The figures prompted a change in mood which was reflected in a rally in global stocks late last week.
"Continued expansion would make the US look more similar to other G10 economies, where the Sahm rule has held less than 70% of the time," Goldman economists said Saturday, noting that several smaller economies, including Canada, had seen sizeable unemployment rate increases in the current cycle without entering a recession.
Claudia Sahm, chief economist at New Century Advisors and inventor of the rule, told CNBC that she did not believe the U.S. was currently in a recession, but that further weakening in the labor market could push it into one.
A healthy jobs report on Sept. 6 would "probably" spur Goldman to cut its recession probability back to 15%, where it had been for nearly a year before August, the bank's economists said.
Unless another downside surprise in the jobs report takes place, Goldman will become more confident in its forecast for a 25 basis point rate cut at the Federal Reserve's September meeting, rather than a steeper 50 basis point trim, they added.
Markets have fully priced in a Fed rate cut in September, but have slashed the odds of a 50 basis point reduction to just 28.5%, according to CME's FedWatch tool.
Rashmi Garg, senior portfolio manager at Al Dhabi Capital, told CNBC's "Capital Connection" on Monday she expected a cut of 25 basis points "unless we see a sizeable deterioration in the labor market in the Sept. 6 jobs report."
— CNBC's Sam Meredith contributed to this story.