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https://content.fortune.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/GettyImages-1240438383-e1660649331517.jpgJP Morgan chief executive Jamie Dimon sees only a 10% chance of an economic slowdown that doesn’t lead to a recession, while ominously warning there are 20-30% odds of “something worse”.
The banking boss said on a client call that while the U.S. economy is still strong and consumer balance sheets and businesses are in “good shape,” there are storm clouds ahead, Yahoo! Finance reported.
Hiked fed rates, quantitative tightening, oil shocks, the war in Ukraine, and rising U.S. tensions with China has pushed Dimon to think that a mild recession has a 20% to 30% chance, while a harder recession has the same odds.
But the remaining outcome?
“Maybe something worse,” he said.
Dimon stresses it is a mistake to point to any single-point forecast as to what will happen with the U.S. economy, but he has a lot to be pessimistic about.
Confidence is low, Dimon argues, “because of inflation, because of partisan politics, and a lot of leftover anger from COVID-19.”
He predicts inflation will not decrease the way the Fed wants it to, calling the goal to bring it down from the 8% to 4% by the end of the year “highly unlikely.”
Dimon adds: “I wish we had the spirit that we were all here to work together but it seems we just got nastier somehow.”
CEO recession predictions
The JP Morgan boss’ prediction, while vague, is direr than most other executives.
While Goldman Sachs chief executive David Solomon similarly warned there is trouble ahead, urging people to prepare for worsening inflation and an approaching recession, Blackrock CEO Larry Fink told investors to keep calm and carry on—calling the economic headwinds currently roiling markets “business as usual” for long-term investors.
Fink said on CNBC’s Jim Cramer’s Mad Money: “Is there a risk of a recession? Sure there is. And even if we’re in one, it’s going to be quite mild.”
The Deutsche Bank CEO Christian Sewing gives the odds of a recession a 50/50 chance, while Harvard economist and economic advisor to the White House under Barack Obama Jason Furman says it’s less likely than that.
Oppenheimer & Co. chief investment strategist John Stoltzfus—the most optimistic on CNBC’s Market Strategist Survey—said the market will not only avoid a recession but will rise 40% from what it stands today by the end of 2022.
This prediction mirrored that of other Wall Street strategists, like David Roche, who says this is a moment to realize that “things do turn around.”
But there are others who are more aligned with Dimon’s “something worse” fears.
Bitcoin bull Mike Novogratz gave one of the most pessimistic predictions, telling MarketWatch, the U.S. was heading into a “really fast recession,” concluding “the economy is going to collapse.”
Businesses tightening their belts
Businesses are already contracting, with retailers like Walmart and Target slashing their profit forecasts, while tech companies including Shopify, Apple, Meta and Microsoft announcing plans to cut workers or slow hiring.
CEO of Meta Mark Zuckerberg had one of the bleakest predictions, saying to employees in a conference call: “If I had to bet, I’d say that this might be one of the worst downturns that we’ve seen in recent history.”
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