Guggenheim Investments represents the following affiliated investment management businesses of Guggenheim Partners, LLC: Guggenheim Partners Investment Management, LLC, Security Investors, LLC, Guggenheim Funds Investment Advisors, LLC, Guggenheim Funds Distributors, LLC, Guggenheim Real Estate, LLC, GS GAMMA Advisors, LLC, Guggenheim Partners Europe Limited, and Guggenheim Partners India Management. Investments in floating rate senior secured syndicated bank loans and other floating rate securities involve special types of risks, including credit risk, interest rate risk, liquidity risk and prepayment risk. Asset-backed securities, including mortgage-backed securities, may have structures that make their reaction to interest rates and other factors difficult to predict, making their prices volatile and they are subject to liquidity risk. High-yield securities present more liquidity and credit risk than investment grade bonds and may be subject to greater volatility. In general, the value of fixed-income securities fall when interest rates rise. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. Information contained herein has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but are not assured as to accuracy. The authors’ opinions are subject to change without notice. It contains opinions of the authors but not necessarily those of Guggenheim Partners or its subsidiaries. This article is distributed for informational purposes only and should not be considered as investing advice or a recommendation of any particular security, strategy or investment product. A 2023 recession remains our base case, but we expect it will not be overly severe, particularly with improved global prospects from Europe’s abating energy crisis and China’s economic reopening. Trends for goods prices and shelter inflation continue to point to lower inflation, but the main concern now for the Fed is core services excluding shelter, a concern likely to be amplified by the strength of the latest jobs and wage numbers. Recent inflation data, along with revisions to 2022 data, will reinforce Fed resolve to keep policy restrictive, as the inflation slowdown looks less convincing than it did just a few weeks ago. Many of the tailwinds that helped bolster the economy in 2022 are now slowing, if not reversing, including service sector reopening, the spend-down of excess savings, and the wealth effect from gains in asset and home prices.Įven if the economy manages to power through these headwinds, the Fed has made it clear that it will push back against any growth acceleration in its quest for a weaker labor market. The boost to consumer sentiment from lower inflation should wane, as we are unlikely to see energy prices continue to fall at the same rate as they have over the last six months. While a recession may be delayed, we are skeptical it can be averted. Cooling inflation and resilient real gross domestic product (GDP) growth have driven a resurgence in market hopes for a “soft landing,” which in this case means a return to 2 percent inflation without a recession. As a result, fourth quarter economic activity held up better than many expected, with consumption growing at a 2.1 percent annualized pace over the quarter. This Macroeconomic Outlook report is excerpted from the First Quarter 2023 Fixed-Income Sector Views.įalling inflation has given a boost to consumers, whose rising real incomes have driven consumer sentiment off the lows seen last summer.
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