InvestorsHub Logo
Followers 85
Posts 32632
Boards Moderated 86
Alias Born 03/22/2005

Re: None

Friday, 07/21/2023 12:59:22 PM

Friday, July 21, 2023 12:59:22 PM

Post# of 110739
Here's an interesting explanation for why the recession hasn't happened yet, even after the hyper-aggressive Fed rate hikes -


>>> 'Something very strange' explains why a US recession has been delayed


Business Insider

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/something-very-strange-explains-why-224230549.html


(excerpt) -

It turns out that during the period of near-zero interest rates, especially leading up to the pandemic and during the pandemic, corporations took advantage and refinanced a ton of their liabilities into long-term, low-rate, fixed debt.

According to data from Bank of America earlier this year, companies bought themselves some time to navigate higher rates. The debt composition of S&P 500 companies includes just 6% in short-term floating rate debt, just 8% in long-term floating rate debt, 10% in short-term fixed debt, and a whopping 76% in long-term fixed debt.

This "helps explain the recession's tardiness," SocGen's Edwards said, highlighting that net interest payments have fallen 25% at a time when they would have risen sharply based on history.

"Companies have effectively played the yield curve in reverse and become net beneficiaries of higher rates, adding 5% to profits over the last year instead of deducting 10%+ from profits as usual," Edwards said.

The lack of a profit decline means companies didn't have to resort to a big wave of layoffs that would have dented the economy and thrown it into a recession.

The low-rate, long-term debt held by corporations, combined with their pricing power during a time of elevated inflation, means most businesses were able to grow profits in a big way.

"Interest rates simply aren't working as they once did. It is indeed a mad, mad world," Edwards concluded.

All of this could change if companies have to refinance their debt at higher rates. But with most of their debts not maturing until 2025, 2026, 2027 and beyond, it's possible that interest rates could move lower between now and then, enabling companies to continue to ride the coattails of low rates and ultimately stave off a recession.


<<<



---

Join the InvestorsHub Community

Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.