January 2025

Global growth is dependent on a resilient US

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The US economy is moving backwards through the cycle, conveniently avoiding a recession, explains Jared Franz, economist at Capital Group.

As inflation eases and central banks around the world cut interest rates, the outlook for the global economy remains decidedly mixed in 2025. Much like the past few years, the US and India continue to lead the way, driving global economic activity, while weaker economies in Europe and China seek to stimulate growth.

With US labour markets healthy, profit growth solid and business investment picking up, the International Monetary Fund raised its forecast for US economic growth in 2025 to 2.2%. That prediction offsets downward revisions for other advanced countries, including the largest economies in Europe. China, meanwhile, continues to struggle with a real estate downturn and worries about a broadening trade war following US President Donald Trump’s victory on 5 November.

Welcome to the Benjamin Button economy

Can US strength lift up the global economy and financial markets along with it? Odd as it may sound, the US economy appears to be taking a page straight out of the 2008 movie The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, in which the title character ages in reverse, from old man to young child (Figure 1).

The US economy is going through a similar transition. Instead of moving through the typical four-stage business cycle that has defined the post-second world war era, the economy appears to be shifting from late-cycle back to mid-cycle, conveniently avoiding a recession.

A mid-cycle economy is generally characterised by rising corporate profits, accelerating credit demand, softening cost pressures and a shift towards neutral monetary policy. We’ve seen all four of those in 2024. The US may be headed for a multi-year expansion period, perhaps fending off a recession until 2028.


Figure 1. The US business cycle appears to be ageing in reverse

 

Sources: Capital Group, MSCI. Positions within the business cycle are forward-looking estimates by Capital Group economists as of December 2023 (2024 bubble) and September 2024 (2025 bubble). The views of individual portfolio managers and analysts may differ. Returns data are monthly from December 1973 to August 2024. Data are Datastream US Total Market Index from 31 December 1973 through 31 December 1994, and MSCI USA data thereafter. Returns data reflect all completed cycle stages through 31 October 2024.


Historically speaking, mid-cycle periods have provided a favourable backdrop for US equities, generating returns averaging 14% a year. That is based on Capital Group analysis of economic cycles and returns dating back to 1973.

As always, it is important to acknowledge that past results are not predictive of results in future periods. But if the US economy continues to grow at a healthy rate, that could provide a healthy tailwind for markets.

Outlook is mixed outside the US

In markets outside the US, there is more divergence. Some bright spots, including India, are expected to lead the world, generating some of the fastest growth rates. India’s economy should enjoy 6.5% growth in 2025, according to IMF estimates, driven by a young and growing workforce. India also is benefitting from a post-pandemic shift in global supply chains.

Europe’s economy continues to ride the edge between expansion and contraction, with expected growth around 1%, weighed down by the war in Ukraine, high energy prices and close ties to China’s sluggish economy. In response, the European Central Bank started cutting interest rates in 2024 ahead of the US Federal Reserve, hoping to kickstart the euro area economy.

In China, meanwhile, the government has launched a massive stimulus programme designed to reverse chronic weakness in the country’s real estate market and slowing industrial production. China’s growth-orientated policies include interest rate cuts, mortgage rate reductions and a $1.4tn aid package to help local governments deal with growing debt burdens. Looking ahead, a cloud hangs over China’s role in international trade as the incoming Trump administration has vowed to raise tariffs on Chinese imports.

Where to invest in a rate-cutting cycle

Adding fuel to economic growth expectations, the world’s major central banks – the Fed, the ECB, the Bank of England and the People’s Bank of China – all committed to monetary easing in the closing months of 2024.

Of the Fed’s seven easing cycles since 1984, three occurred outside a recession. During those non-recessionary cycles, the S&P 500 Index averaged a 27.9% return from the first cut to the last, with most sectors posting double-digit gains.


Figure 2. Rate cuts have boosted stocks and bonds in a healthy economy

Sources: Capital Group, Bloomberg Index Services, Morningstar, Standard & Poor’s. Return calculations reflect annualised total returns over periods in which the Fed had stopped raising rates and began to actively cut rates, measured from the peak federal funds rate target to the lowest federal funds rate target for each cycle. Specific easing cycles included: August 1984 to August 1986 (non-recessionary), May 1989 to September 1992 (recessionary), February 1995 to January 1996 (non-recessionary), March 1997 to November 1998 (non-recessionary), May 2000 to June 2003 (recessionary), June 2006 to December 2008 (recessionary), and December 2018 to March 2020 (recessionary). Benchmarks used are the S&P 500 Index (US stocks), MSCI World ex USA Index (international stocks), Bloomberg US Aggregate Index (US bonds) and the average investment rate of 3-month US Treasury Bills (cash). As of 30 September 2024.


During times when rate-cutting cycles have preceded a recession, stocks have not fared well. But bond returns have been strong in both non-recessionary and recessionary cutting cycles, significantly outpacing cash equivalent investments in non-recessionary periods.

John Queen, fixed income portfolio manager at Capital Group, believes the economy will continue to improve in 2025 and thinks the Fed is simply looking to normalise interest rates, reducing them to a level where they are no longer restrictive. That was the base case before the US election, and it is even more so now.

For full disclosures go to capitalgroup.com/global-disclosures.

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