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Goldman Sachs Raises US Recession Probability, What Are the Reasons?

Source Tradingkey

TradingKey - Goldman Sachs recently raised the probability of a U.S. recession over the next 12 months to 30%. While this adjustment itself may just be a numerical change, in the current macroeconomic environment, it reflects more of a shift in stance—market confidence in a "soft landing" for the U.S. economy is beginning to waver. Although economic data has not yet weakened across the board, the convergence of policy uncertainty, sticky inflation, and external shocks has put risk back on the table.

From a "Low-Probability Risk" to a "Must-Price-In" Variable

The significance of the 30% figure lies not in its precision, but in the fact that it is high enough to alter market behavior patterns. For investors, this means a recession is no longer a tail-risk event, but a realistic scenario that must be incorporated into asset allocation and risk management.

Behind Goldman's assessment are two key logical drivers. On one hand, the market had previously been overly optimistic in pricing in the resilience of the U.S. economy, assuming that consumption, employment, and corporate earnings could continue to support growth in a high-interest-rate environment. However, over time, the premise that "stable growth can persist under high rates" is being challenged.

On the other hand, uncertainty regarding external variables remains strong, particularly disruptions from trade policy and geopolitics. In particular, the ongoing deterioration of the U.S.-Iran situation makes it difficult for companies and markets to form stable expectations.

In other words, the upward revision of recession risk is not due to a sudden deterioration in a specific data point, but rather a marginal weakening of market confidence in the overall environment.

The "Lagged Effect" of the High-Interest-Rate Environment Is Beginning to Manifest

A core issue facing the U.S. economy is that the impact of high interest rates is not instantaneous but has a clear time lag. For a while, resilient consumption and employment figures have largely masked the pressure that rising financing costs are exerting on businesses and households.

However, this state is difficult to sustain over the long term. As time passes, high interest rates will gradually transmit to corporate investment, the real estate market, and the credit environment.

Rising financing costs imply a decline in corporate expansion intent, with capital expenditures tending to be more cautious; for consumers, rising loan rates will also weigh on big-ticket spending. These changes often do not manifest in data immediately, but once they begin to surface, they tend to persist.

Goldman's upward revision of the recession probability largely reflects the accumulation of this "lagged risk." While the market was previously focused on current data, it is now starting to give more weight to potential changes over the coming quarters.

Uncertainty Surrounding Inflation and Policy Paths Remains the Core Variable

Another unavoidable issue is that the inflation path remains uncertain. Recently, energy prices have continued to rise, driven by the situation between the U.S. and Iran. Once oil prices ( USOIL) stay at high levels, they will provide support for headline inflation. This means the Federal Reserve still faces constraints in its interest rate policy choices.

If inflation fails to return to the target range in a timely manner, it will be difficult for the Fed to pivot quickly toward easing, and rates could stay high for longer. This creates a classic "double pressure" on the economy: high rates suppress demand, while inflation erodes real purchasing power.

In such an environment, policy maneuvering room is compressed and the economy's "buffer" thins. Should an external shock occur, the magnitude of market adjustments could be amplified.

Asset Market Repricing Has Begun but Is Not Yet Complete

Looking at recent market performance, these risk shifts have begun to be reflected. Treasury yields remain high, the dollar has strengthened, and equity volatility is rising. However, in terms of overall magnitude, the market does not yet appear to have fully priced in a scenario consistent with a "30% recession probability."

This is also one of the reasons why Goldman's adjustment has drawn attention: if recession risk continues to rise, or if upcoming data starts to validate this judgment, the market may need a new round of adjustments for earnings expectations, valuation levels, and capital allocation.

Especially for U.S. stocks, current valuations are still built on the premise that corporate earnings will remain resilient. Once weakening demand and rising costs combine to put pressure on the earnings side, it will be difficult to justify valuations at current levels.

Shifting from "Whether a Recession Will Occur" to "How to Cope with Volatility"

To some extent, what the market needs to address next is no longer just "whether the U.S. economy will enter a recession," but rather how various asset classes will perform if growth slows or signs of a recession emerge.

For investors, this means that strategies need to shift from directional bets to a focus on risk diversification and flexible adjustment. Interest rate paths, inflation data, labor market shifts, and geopolitical developments will all become key variables affecting market rhythm.

Goldman Sachs' upward revision of the recession probability serves as a reminder to the market: the current macroeconomic environment does not support overly one-sided optimistic expectations. The interplay between growth, inflation, and policy continues, and this uncertainty itself is sufficient to be the core force driving market trends.

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