Morgan Stanley IM: 2023 Will Feel Worse on Main Street than Wall Street
Jim Caron, Co-Lead Global Portfolio Manager and Co-Chief Investment Officer, Global Balanced Risk Control Team, shares his macro thematic views on key market drivers.18.01.2023 | 08:42 Uhr
- Friday jobs data showed YoY wages falling, but with steady jobs growth and a drop in the unemployment rate.
- Is falling wage inflation without a deterioration in the labor market a win for policy makers? Perhaps, if you use Wall Street (asset markets) as a barometer.
- What about Main Street though? Inflation is near 7% and wages are starting to fall, and while job gains were strong, a closer look reveals they were lower quality, lower paying jobs.
- The Fed’s design to lower inflation will eventually hurt labor markets – just look at the layoffs recently announced by large corporations. Main Street may end up consuming less, leading to declining profit margins if corporations cannot easily raise prices.
- As discussed, we see fat-tail risks on both sides of the risk distribution, which may keep volatility elevated. In the end, this is likely what a bumpy landing feels like.