The White House will pay attention only when Goldman Sachs becomes
gloomy? And what does Goldman Sachs know about such things? Everyone
says their economist Hatzius is so smart, but he was projecting 4%
growth not that long ago.

http://blogs.reuters.com/james-pethokoukis/2011/07/16/panic-at-the-white-house-gloomy-goldman-sachs-sees-high-unemployment-possible-recession/

http://wallstcheatsheet.com/stocks/goldman-sachs-20-chance-of-2012-recession.html/

---------------------------snip
Whatever the case, even using the lenient government statistics for
GDP, Goldman’s Jan Hatzius has moved up the chances of a recession in
2012 to 15-20%.  While he has been as wrong as just about everyone on
Wall Street with the talks of 4%+ GDP in 2011, he is still the most
widely followed economist amongst the major banks due to a quite good
track record. (relatively speaking)

Some highlights:

    Jan Hatzius, the chief U.S. economist of Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS),
started out the year among the most bullish economists on Wall Street
about 2011 economic growth. Six months later, after a disappointing
first half, he’s less optimistic and growing a little antsy about the
risk of renewed recession.
    In an interview with The Wall Street Journal, Mr. Hatzius said he
saw a 15% to 20% chance of renewed recession next year. His baseline
forecast is still for a resumption of stronger growth in the second
half of 2011 and into 2012, but he has taken down his 3.5% to 4%
forecast by a half percentage point and increased his unemployment
rate forecast to 8.25% from 8% by the end of 2012.
    “If you were to see, over the next three months, an increase in
the unemployment rate by say a half a percentage point or so, I would
be pretty nervous about a renewed recession,” Mr. Hatzius said. “It is
not our expectation, but that would that would make me fairly
nervous.”
    Goldman has been noting recently its “three-tenths rule.” Since
World War II, an increase in the three-month moving average of the
U.S. unemployment rate by more than 0.3 of a percentage point has
always led to a much bigger increases in the unemployment rate and
recession. The three-month average rate has increased by 0.07
percentage point since April. It would need to be sustained around
9.2% for several months for the rule to apply now.
    Goldman (NYSE:GS) economists were bullish early in the year
because they believed that households had been making good progress in
paying down their debts and were in a better position to resume
spending. Mr. Hatzius said a combination of shocks from abroad and a
softer underlying growth led its forecast astray for the first half of
the year. But he said households are still making progress repairing
their balance sheets, and therefore, he expects growth to pick up
speed in the months ahead. “The progress that was evident six months
ago is still visible,” he said.
    On the policy front, Mr. Hatzius said he didn’t see the Federal
Reserve raising interest rates until early 2013, and he doesn’t think
it will restart its asset purchase program unless inflation slows and
the economy fails to regain momentum.
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