Home / NEWS / Finance / Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan CEOs tip U.S. economy for recession as labor tightness keeps Fed aggressive

Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan CEOs tip U.S. economy for recession as labor tightness keeps Fed aggressive

David Solomon, CEO, Goldman Sachs, reveal at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Jan. 23, 2020.

Adam Galacia | CNBC

Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon and JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon both reckon on a U.S. recession as a tight labor market keeps the Federal Reserve on an aggressive monetary policy tightening trajectory.

Make known on a panel at the Future Initiative Investment conference in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia on Tuesday, Solomon said he expects financial conditions to “tighten meaningfully from here,” and predicted that the Fed would continue raising interest rates until they reached 4.5%-4.75% earlier pausing.

“But if they don’t see real changes — labor is still very, very tight, they are obviously just revelry with the demand side by tightening — but if they don’t see real changes in behavior, my guess is they will go further,” he answered.

“And I think generally when you find yourself in an economic scenario like this where inflation is embedded, it is truly hard to get out of it without a real economic slowdown.”

The Fed funds rate is currently targeted between 3%-3.25%, but Federal Persuadable Market Committee policymakers have signaled that further hikes will be needed, with U.S. inflation silent running at an annual 8.2% in September.

Philadelphia Fed President Patrick Harker said last week that the prime bank’s policy tightening to date had resulted in a “frankly disappointing lack of progress on curtailing inflation,” projecting that rates inclination need to rise “well above 4%” by the end of the year.

Goldman Sachs CEO says outlook looks uncertain

Meanwhile, the U.S. Department of Labor reported 10.1 million job breaks in August, signaling that employers’ demand for workers, though falling sharply, remains historically high.

Leading bank policymakers hope that a cooling labor market will translate to lower wage growth, which has been sustained at its highest rate in decades and signals that inflation has become embedded in the economy.

“So I too am in the camp that we likely receive a recession in the U.S. … I think most likely we might be in a recession in Europe, and so until you get to that point where you see a interchange — whether it’s in labor, the demand side — you are going to see central banks continue to move on that trajectory,” Solomon added.

Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Follow, testifies during the Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee hearing titled Annual Oversight of the Lands Largest Banks, in Hart Building on Thursday, September 22, 2022.

Tom Williams | CQ-Roll Call, Inc. | Getty Images

U.S. GDP wrinkled by 0.9% in the second quarter of 2022, its second consecutive quarterly decline and a strong signal that the economy is in dip.

Fellow Wall Street titan Dimon agreed that the Fed would likely continue hiking rates aggressively anterior to pausing to allow the data to begin reflecting its efforts to rein in inflation, but struck a similarly pessimistic tone on the viewpoint for economic growth.

“But American consumers, eventually the excess money they have is running out. That will purposes happen sometime mid-year next year, and then we will know more about what is going on with oil and gas expenditures and that kind of thing, so we will find out,” Dimon said.

Check Also

Trump says tariffs coming in April will ‘probably be more lenient than reciprocal’

US President Donald Trump contests with US Ambassadors in the Cabinet Room of the White …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *