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Morgan Stanley bucks gloom and doom, thinks U.S. economy has legs through 2020

Market Data

Morgan Stanley bucks gloom and doom, thinks U.S. economy has legs through 2020

Strong job growth and dwindling consumer debt give rise to hope.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | January 13, 2016

Economists continue to debate whether the U.S. economy will be more resilient than other nations and thrive, or limp along for the next several years. Image courtesy Pixabay

Last week, The World Bank lowered its estimate for global growth in 2016 to 2.9%, from its 3.5% prediction last June. The Bank is particularly concerned about slowdowns in China and developing companies that could reverberate, long term, to advanced economies.

However, the Bankā€™s forecast was more optimistic about the United States, whose 2.7% economic growth in 2016, if realized, would be its fastest pace since 2006.

Whether the U.S. can outpace other nationsā€™ economies is a topic of some debate. James Pethokoukis, a Fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, thinks the U.S. could face decades of ā€œunhealthy economic populismā€ if GDP and job growth arenā€™t matched by productivity gains, which over the past five years have averaged only 0.6%.Ā  More dour is Citigroup, which is on record that thereā€™s a 65% chance of another recession in the U.S. this year.

The current state of Americaā€™s stock market, which got off to a miserable start in 2016, doesnā€™t exactly augur happy days ahead. But that downturn, and the generally mediocre pace at which the worldā€™s economies are moving, didnā€™t deter Morgan Stanley from reiterating its belief that the U.S. would continue growing through 2020, and thereby achieve the longest economic expansion in the post-World War II era.

Morgan also thinks that if the U.S. skirts another recession, corporate profit growth could lift the S&P 500 to 3,000 by 2020. (That Index ended Jan. 13 at 1,890.28, down 48.40 to its lowest level since last September. Morganā€™s prediction is in sharp contrast with economic bears who are already predicting the S&P 500 could collapse by as much as 75% from its peak of 2100 last year, driven down by Chinaā€™s currency deflation.)

There are three main reasons why Morgan Stanley remains bullish about the American economy:

ā€¢The U.S added about 200,000 jobs per month in 2015, its second-best year for employment gains since 1999. The employment picture spurred consumer confidence, as measured by the University of Michigan, to average 92.9 last year, the highest itā€™s been at since 2004.

ā€¢Americans are getting themselves out of the red. Morgan Stanley notes that debt to disposable income, at about 106%, has fallen from 138% in 2008. And the portion of loan balances that are 90-plus days delinquent fell below 4% for the first time since the recession ended.

ā€¢Big companies are cleaning up their balance sheets and being a lot more careful about what they invest in. Morgan Stanley expects capital spending-to sales at the largest 1,500 corporations to fall to 4.6%, compared to between 6% and 9% before the last two recessions. S&P 500 companies have about $100 billion in loans coming due this year and $300 billion in 2017, which Morgan considers manageable amounts.Ā Ā 

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