In this episode of The Glass Half Full, Ryan Detrick, Chief Market Strategist at Carson Group, and Sonu Varghese, Chief Macro Strategist at Carson Group, cut through the noise of recent market volatility to offer a grounded, historically informed perspective. With bond yields swinging, oil prices surging, and fear dominating headlines, Ryan and Sonu ask the most important question on every investor’s mind: are we headed for a recession?
Sonu breaks down why today’s labor market, with unemployment at historically low levels and prime-age employment outpacing the last two expansion cycles, doesn’t point to an imminent downturn. The real risk, he argues, lies with the Federal Reserve and the potential for aggressive rate hikes, a pattern that has historically pushed the economy into recession. Ryan adds crucial historical context, reminding viewers that double-digit annual declines in the S&P 500 are rare and almost always tied to a true economic contraction.
They also discuss the “dual tailwinds” of the bull market: rising corporate profits and expanding profit margins, trends that have persisted for nearly three years and can offset a great deal of uncertainty. As always, the glass-half-full message prevails: volatility is the toll you pay to invest, and for long-term investors, staying the course has consistently been rewarded.
Key Takeaways
- Market pullbacks are normal: The average year since 1980 has seen a 14% peak-to-trough decline.
- Recession risk is real but not inevitable: A strong labor market keeps the economy off a direct glide path downward.
- The Fed is the wildcard: Rate hikes, not current conditions, are the most likely recession trigger.
- Dual tailwinds remain intact: Rising profits and expanding margins continue to support the bull market case.
- Stay invested: Since the COVID lows in March 2020, the S&P 500 is up nearly 200%.
