Speculative builds adding to deflationary pressure in real estate

During the supply disruptions of the pandemic, stockpiling became an international obsession and warehouse space was in high demand. That’s reversing now. In the fourth quarter of 2023, the US had 5.2% of warehouse space empty versus 4.7% in 2019.

Construction doesn’t turn on a dime, though. Hundreds of millions of new square footage are still being built on spec and look likely to add deflationary pressures in the commercial real estate sector. See Warehouse Availability Surges to The Highest Level Since the Pandemic:

Industry experts have warned the leasing slowdown raises the potential for a glut of warehouse space in the coming months with hundreds of million square feet of new development in the construction pipeline. Much of that space is being built without tenants lined up, known in the real-estate sector as speculative projects.

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Recession alarm with no false positives

There has never been an incidence in history where the US Conference Board Leading Economic Index (LEI) had a six-month average growth rate sub -4.5%, and the US economy did not enter an NBER-defined recession.

The six-month smoothed LEI growth rate in November was -7.5% (chart below since 2000, courtesy of ISABELNET.com) and has been negative for 20 consecutive months, something only seen before the 1974 and 2008 recessions (stock markets halved and unemployment leapt during both).
(The 10 data points in the LEI are the leading credit index, S&P 500 stock prices, yield spread between the 10-year treasury and the Fed funds rate, average consumer expectations for business conditions, ISM new orders, building permits, average weekly hours worked in manufacturing, manufacturing new orders, consumer goods orders, average weekly initial jobless claims).

When we combine the sub -4.5% LEI trend with the inverted 10-year minus 3-month yield spread and falling Gross Domestic Income (GDI), the warning of incoming recession has never been louder. Yet, most are ill-prepared.

Economist Eric Basmajin does an excellent job of explaining the significance of these signals in the segment below.

Explore the reliability of the Conference Board Leading Index, a recession indicator with a flawless track record spanningic  six decades. This video delves into the current -7.5% growth rate, compares it with other indicators, and challenges the optimistic narrative driven by recent stock market performance, emphasizing the importance of staying vigilant to potential economic downturns. Here is a direct video link.

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Financial cycle behavior is consistent

In June 1999, the US Fed began an 11-month rate hiking cycle that took the overnight rate from 4.75 to 6.5% by May 2000. Amid tech-mania-inspired irrational exuberance, the S&P 500 hit 1527 by March 2000, sold off into the summer, and rebounded to double top at 1521 by September on soft-landing forecasts.

What unfolded was, in fact, a mild 8-month US recession from March through November 2001, with the unemployment rate rising to June 2003. The stock market did not bottom until September 2002, when the S&P reached 688–54% below its March 2000 top.

Canada did not experience an official recession in the 2000-02 cycle, yet the TSX Composite followed US markets in lockstep, falling 52% from August 2000 to October 2002. The stock market would not reclaim its 2000 cycle top for five full years in September 2005. The tech-heavy Nasdaq, which fell 78% between 2000 and 2002, would not reclaim its cycle peak until 16 years later, in July 2016.

After leaving the overnight rate at a debt-stimulating 1% from June 2003 through June 2004, the US Fed finally began a two-year tightening cycle that took the overnight rate to 5.25% by June 2006. With the usual delay between interest rate changes and the real economy, home prices in the US and other countries entered an epic bubble that began to burst in 2006. Still, stock prices rallied on. The S&P 500 hit 1553 in July 2007, sold off into the summer and then double-topped around 1565 that October on soft-landing confidence. The US economy entered the ‘Great Recession’ from December 2007 through June 2009, with the unemployment rate rising to January 2010.

This time, Canada experienced its recession from October 2008 through May 2009, with its unemployment rate rising until the fall of 2009. Coming into the 2008 recession with less debt and less inflated home prices, Canada’s economy fared better and recovered faster than many other countries. Still, Canada’s stock market followed the US decline in lockstep, with the TSX Composite peaking in October 2007, double-topping into May 2008 and tumbling 47% into March 2009. The TSX did not durably surpass its May 2008 cycle top until December 2020–more than 12 years later.

In November 2007, as soft-landing advocates were loud and stocks still rich, I wrote a blog article, Looking Up From the Minutiae to See the Big Picture. It turned out that the takeaways were prescient then and bear repeating now.

And so we see that a person who held Government of Canada bonds and T-bills throughout the past 8 years would actually have fared better than the vast majority of investors.

Those who avoided passive allocation strategies in equities over the past 8 years actually did not miss the boat. They caught the lifejacket. They missed out on the agony, angst and upset of large market losses and emotional trauma.

The long always industry is still selling everyone this passive, buy and hold bill of goods. And most investors, sadly, will continue to suffer the consequences unless, of course, they WAKE UP and see that there is a better way.

As in 2000 and 2007, at current levels, stocks are priced to underperform the safest bonds over the next several years. History never repeats exactly, but financial cycle behaviour is remarkably consistent. We can use that knowledge with discipline to our benefit.

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