No New Normal JPMorgan Sees V-Shaped Recovery in U.S. (Update1)
By Steve Matthews

Aug. 14 (Bloomberg) -- Instead of a so-called New Normal of subdued growth, the 
U.S. may be heading for a robust recovery.

The worst recession since the 1930s has created a reservoir of demand that will 
buoy the economy, say a growing number of economists led by James Glassman at 
JPMorgan Chase & Co., former Federal Reserve Governor Laurence Meyer and 
Stephen Stanley at RBS Securities Inc.

"Whenever we have plunged off a cliff and fallen into a deep hole in the past, 
for a while the economy has a tendency to bounce back very quickly," said 
Glassman, a senior economist at JPMorgan in New York. Glassman and his 
colleagues this month said forecasts of 3 percent to 4 percent growth in coming 
quarters may be too low given "pent-up" consumer demand.

JPMorgan's outlook contradicts the view popularized by Mohamed El-Erian at 
Pacific Investment Management Co. that elevated unemployment and record wealth 
destruction will keep growth at 2 percent or less for years. The divergence 
highlights the dilemma for policy makers, who must decide whether to maintain 
record fiscal and monetary stimulus or begin to pull back and prevent a surge 
in inflation should growth accelerate.

El-Erian, chief executive officer of Newport Beach, California-based Pimco, 
said "the indicators we follow continue to point to sluggish medium-term growth 
in the U.S.," when asked to respond to arguments for a so-called v-shaped 
recovery.

Retail Sales

A report from the Federal Reserve today added to signs of recovery as 
industrial production rose 0.5 percent in July, the first increase in nine 
months. A separate government report showed consumer prices were unchanged, 
emphasizing companies lack pricing power after the biggest drop in U.S. gross 
domestic product in any recession since the 1930s.

Confidence among U.S. consumers unexpectedly fell in August for a second 
consecutive month as concern over jobs and wages grew, according to the 
Reuters/University of Michigan preliminary index of consumer sentiment today. 
The U.S. has lost 6.7 million jobs in the recession that began in December 2007.

The New Normal theory predicts that the recession will leave unemployment, 
forecast to reach 10 percent for the first time since 1983 early next year, 
higher for years. Glassman and Meyer dispute that.

"The thing I object to most about the New Normal idea is that we are stuck and 
have to accept higher unemployment -- if you look at the Fed, they are doing 
everything they can to fight it," said Glassman, who formerly worked as a Fed 
economist in Washington.

Meyer's Projections

Meyer, who served as a central bank governor from 1996 until 2002, said he and 
his colleagues "don't find any evidence" that the unemployment rate consistent 
with stable inflation is now higher. Meyer is now vice chairman of St. 
Louis-based Macroeconomic Advisers LLC, whose economic estimates are monitored 
by the National Bureau of Economic Research panel charged with dating U.S. 
recessions.

Meyer expects GDP to jump by 3.6 percent in 2010 and 3.9 percent in 2011. 
Annual growth surpassed 3 percent only once so far this decade, in 2004, and 
has averaged just 2.2 percent.

"The big driver of that is home prices," said Meyer, referring to his recovery 
forecast. "If home prices stabilize, that is a tremendous boost to housing that 
dominates every other variable in our equation. There is a lot of pent-up 
demand in that particular area."

Home construction has subtracted from GDP growth for a record 14 straight 
quarters through June 2009. Consumer spending has also dropped in four of the 
past six quarters, and is down 2 percent from its peak in July-to-September 
2007, the biggest retrenchment since 1980.

`Very Depressed'

Housing and automobile sales are at "very depressed levels" and are likely to 
contribute to growth even if they don't reach prior peaks, said Stanley, chief 
economist at RBS Securities in Greenwich, Connecticut, who used to work at the 
Richmond Fed.

"Consumers are holding off on practically all of their discretionary 
purchases," said Stanley, who sees the expansion picking up from 2.9 percent 
next year to 4.4 percent in 2011 and "about" 3.5 percent in 2012. "There is a 
lot of pent-up demand."

Recoveries from the past two recessions were weaker than in previous decades. 
After the 2001 recession, the economy expanded just 1.6 percent in 2002, 
picking up to 2.5 percent the next year. The 1990-91 recession was followed by 
3.3 percent growth in 1992 and a 2.7 percent gain in 1993.

U.S. Roared

By contrast, the U.S. roared out of the 1981-82 recession. In 1983, GDP rose 
4.5 percent, accelerating to a 7.2 percent pace in 1984, when Ronald Reagan won 
re-election with victories in 49 of 50 states.

Alan Blinder, the former Fed vice chairman who is now an economics professor at 
Princeton University in New Jersey, has described himself as "skeptical" of the 
New Normal scenario.

"To accept a 2 percent trend, you have to believe in about a 1.2 or 1.3 percent 
productivity trend -- I don't," Blinder said in an e-mailed response to 
questions. He added that he sees growth sustained at "closer, but not quite, to 
3 percent" in coming years.

Fed policy makers in their latest projections submitted in June anticipated an 
expansion of 2.1 percent to 3.3 percent from this year's fourth quarter to the 
same period next year and 3.8 percent to 4.6 percent in 2011.

`Leveling Out'

Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and his Federal Open Market Committee colleagues two 
days ago said the economy is "leveling out." The central bank has pumped about 
$1 trillion into the banking system in a campaign to end the crisis, triggered 
by mortgage defaults, that has caused more than $1.6 trillion in losses and 
writedowns among financial firms worldwide.

President Barack Obama last week said: "We are pointed in the right direction," 
in remarks at the White House. "We've rescued our economy from catastrophe." 
The administration anticipates a gathering impact from its $787 billion fiscal 
stimulus into next year.

Some companies are also seeing signs of a turn in the economy.

Karen Hoguet, chief financial officer at Macy's Inc., the second-biggest U.S. 
department store chain, said on a conference call Aug. 12 that the 
Cincinnati-based company is "cautiously optimistic" its sales trends will 
improve.

A rebound in equities in recent months will help repair households' balance 
sheets and buttresses the outlook for spending, said Glassman at JPMorgan.

The Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index has climbed about 50 percent from its low 
in March. U.S. stock-market capitalization has increased by almost $4 trillion 
in that time.

Economists' Forecasts

Economists this month lifted their projection for third- quarter growth by 1.2 
percentage points to 2.2 percent compared with July, according to the median of 
55 forecasts in a Bloomberg News survey. That is the biggest such boost in 
surveys dating from May 2003. Forecasts for 2010 were raised to 2.3 percent 
from 2.1 percent.

Neal Soss, chief economist at Credit Suisse Group AG in New York, played down 
concern that the economy may suffer a "double dip" recession.

"Historically these double dips are routinely forecast and actually very rarely 
come to pass," Soss said in a Bloomberg TV interview this week. "Once the 
economy tends to get some upward momentum, it tends to keep going that way." 

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601109&sid=avR3wifbUr1w


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