Economist explains why a recession next year won’t feel like 2020 or 2009

Jefferies Senior Economist Thomas Simons joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss when the impact from Fed rate hikes will hit the economy, positive indicators, and the outlook for a mild recession.

Video Transcript

BRAD SMITH: The Street is currently expecting a recession sometime in the first quarter of 2023. But our next guest says it will take a bit more time. Joining us now, we've got Jefferies senior economist, Thomas Simons. Thomas, great to have you here with us today. Help us really run through what your expectations are and why and when-- why in terms of the catalysts and then when in terms of timing you're expecting a recession to hit.

THOMAS SIMONS: Sure, so I think, yeah, the main difference between our call and many of our competitors is just the sense that the economy is really approaching this period of time from a position of much greater strength than it typically does as it rolls into a recession. So you pointed out just the chart before you had a couple of quarters of negative GDP growth, but Q3 is really shaping up to be quite a bit stronger.

In Q4, you know, I don't have any expectations that we're going to end up with a negative number again. It's really into the second half of next year that we're going to start to see the cumulative effects of all the hikes start to really hit, and plus the strength of the dollar as well. I don't think that we've really seen much evidence that that's actually taking a big bite out of economic activity just yet because the economy is just generally less interest rate sensitive than it normally is at this point in the business cycle.

Lots of consumers and businesses already have a lot of locked in cheap borrowing that is-- doesn't need to be refinanced any time soon. You look at things like mortgage rates and these sorts of things that are spiking. But, you know, consumers don't have a lot of adjustable rate loans.

So the same sort of dynamic is at play with businesses, with balance sheets are very, very strong. We haven't seen much margin compression just yet either. These sorts of things, we expect, are going to start to really take hold into the second half of 2023, especially as the Fed continues to raise interest rates here.

JULIE HYMAN: Thomas Mann, we have been on the drumbeat for this recession for what feels like so long now. And now it sounds like according to you, we're going to be on it for quite a while longer before we actually get there. You, in your latest note, have this sort of scenario that you're painting of entering it later. And then, I believe in the first quarter of 2024, seeing the worst of it with the drop in-- of 2.3% in growth here-- or in GDP, I should say.