Wednesday, March 15, 2023

POLITICO NIGHTLY: Is the recession here? Three things to watch after the SVB debacle

 


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BY SUDEEP REDDY

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Alibaba

WHAT LURKS BENEATH — Seven days ago, most of the political world had never heard of Silicon Valley Bank. Most American business owners hadn’t pondered whether cash sitting idle in their bank accounts would be safe. Few elected officials had devoted even a moment to worrying about a new banking crisis. And investors were still scratching their heads over why the fastest hiking of interest rates in recent history — courtesy of the Federal Reserve and its war on persistently high inflation — had failed to dent the underlying economy and its red-hot labor market.

All of that has changed.

The spectacular implosion of the lender exposed vulnerabilities lurking beneath the U.S. financial system. It also put down a marker to gauge whether a long-predicted recession is finally on its way. What’s next? Here are three things to watch.

1. More regulatory scrutiny — and risk aversion

Some regulators have egg on their face after the SVB debacle — amid questions about whether they should have seen it coming. The rest want to avoid the same mistake on their watch. Every responsible bank supervisor in America is spending their week scrutinizing the institutions they oversee to ensure they don’t become part of the falling dominoes. Lawmakers will hold hearings and bleary-eyed government officials will promise to get tougher in their roles after quietly executing a sweeping rescue with almost no public debate.

All of that means bankers themselves — particularly at firms watching their deposits flee to bigger, too-big-to-fail competitors — will start a retreat. They’ll rein in lending bit by bit, either to correct their self-made risks or guard against more aggressive oversight.

The consequences of a credit crunch could take months to show up in real economic data. But we can be sure it’s now underway. Less available credit in the economy will translate into slower investment among small and medium businesses. Roller-coaster moves in stock and bond markets — some short-term government debt this week took its largest swings since the 1987 stock market crash — will spook some larger businesses and a wider swath of investors, too. Ultimately it’ll all translate into less spending.

2. Soft landing? Hard landing? The debate ends in 2023.

There’s an old adage in economics: Expansions don’t die of old age. They get murdered , usually by the Fed — to kill inflation.

The past six months have been consumed by a debate about how the underlying economy would react to a pummeling by the Fed. Will it be a “soft landing ” — little damage from the rate hikes — or a “hard landing ” with real pain for American households and businesses? The suspense will end this year.

The most peculiar element of the Fed’s rapid rate hikes over the past year has been the result. Consumers and businesses are holding strong in just about every sector. That’s partly due to lingering savings from the surge in government spending in the pandemic (the one that likely worsened the inflation problem). It’s also due to persistently low unemployment and strong wage growth — due in part to many employers’ desires to hoard labor after years of worker shortages.

A weaker economy, due to tighter lending and reduced credit, will likely solve the Fed’s inflation problems.

3. What else could go wrong? Beware the dreaded “perfect storm.”

A single week of action has managed to merge into one moment the most searing debates across 15 years of economic policy: the role of the government in rescuing private businesses, bank regulation since the 2008 crisis, the perils of low interest rates and high interest rates, the risk of key sectors (like tech and housing) gorging themselves on cheap money, the prospect of worrying about today’s economic problems over tomorrow’s threats.

Other potential trouble is always lurking under the surface — whether from the war in Europe or confrontations in Asia, or some other risk few people are imagining today. An economic environment on edge from existing vulnerabilities usually doesn’t react well to new ones.

Now, the job for the economy’s overseers is to ensure the bank rescues of March 2023 don’t look like the easy part.

Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com . Or contact tonight’s author at sreddy@politico.com or on Twitter at @Reddy .

 

STEP INSIDE THE WEST WING : What's really happening in West Wing offices? Find out who's up, who's down, and who really has the president’s ear in our West Wing Playbook newsletter, the insider's guide to the Biden White House and Cabinet. For buzzy nuggets and details that you won't find anywhere else, subscribe today .

 
 
WHAT'D I MISS?

— Garcetti confirmed to ambassadorship despite cloud of scandal: The Senate confirmed former Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti’s nomination to become U.S. ambassador to India, capping off months of limbo over his fate. Garcetti’s won confirmation on a 52-42 vote , with seven GOP senators supporting him and three Democrats voting no. That unusual bipartisan tally reflected the controversy that nearly unraveled Garcetti’s nomination, stemming from allegations that he was aware of — and did not act on — sexual assault and harassment accusations against his former top aide, Rick Jacobs. Garcetti has denied that he knew of the accusations against Jacobs before they became public. Wednesday’s vote came nearly two years after President Joe Biden tapped Garcetti for the post .

 MAGA favorite won’t run for key Senate seat: Conservative commentator Kathy Barnette, who waged an insurgent Pennsylvania Senate campaign in 2022 that briefly panicked GOP insiders, will not make another run for that office in 2024 , she told POLITICO in an interview. Her decision will likely come as a relief to traditional Republican leaders who are trying to unite the party around Dave McCormick, a former hedge fund CEO and Bush administration official, in an effort to unseat Sen. Bob Casey (D-Pa.) next year.

 Federal board allows rail merger, amid fresh questions about safety: A federal board on Wednesday approved a proposed merger between two major freight railroads , a decision that will enable further consolidation in an industry that’s already under intense scrutiny for its safety practices. The Surface Transportation Board, an independent body that oversees the freight rail industry, has given its blessing to a merger between Canadian Pacific Railway and Kansas City Southern, narrowing the field of major North American freight railroads to just six. The two railroads are the smallest major freights operating in the U.S., and the new entity would still be the smallest of those remaining. It will be the first major rail merger in 25 years.

— What does SVB’s collapse mean for other banks? Here’s what else might go wrong — and what to expect next: The sweeping results of President Joe Biden’s actions last weekend prevented multimillion-dollar losses for thousands of companies that relied on Silicon Valley Bank. But the fallout from the largest bank failure since the 2008 financial crisis is still reverberating. As regulators race to find a buyer willing to take on the bank’s domestic lending portfolio, some major companies are left scrambling to secure new lines of credit. Lobbyists are drawing battle lines as progressives in Congress push for tighter regulations. And Washington is still racing to calm investor fears of instability at other financial institutions. POLITICO’s finance and economics reporters teamed up with a banking regulation expert to answer your most pressing questions on Reddit .

A message from Alibaba:

Thousands of American businesses partner with Alibaba to sell their products to over 1 billion consumers in China. In fact, last year, U.S. sales to Chinese consumers on Alibaba supported 390,000 U.S. jobs, $31 billion in American wages, and added $47 billion to the U.S. GDP. Learn about Alibaba’s positive impact on the U.S. economy.

 
NIGHTLY ROAD TO 2024

OPPO DUMP  Former President Donald Trump’s campaign is preparing an expansive opposition research file by poring over Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ record as a prosecutor, member of Congress, and governor, reports POLITICO’s Meridith McGraw. Among the items a Trump-allied group has drilled into is DeSantis’ record while serving as an assistant U.S. Attorney before running for congressional office, with plans to accuse him of being an “extremely lenient prosecutor” in cases involving, among other things, child pornography. The preparations are the latest sign of a bruising primary fight to come.

GRADING DESANTIS — Former Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker — once the GOP 2016 presidential frontrunner — sits down with POLITICO’s video team and offers his thoughts on potential 2024 hopeful Ron DeSantis’ performance as Florida governor .

CHRISTIE TO NH — Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie is heading to New Hampshire later this month, sparking more 2024 speculation . The former two-term governor, who unsuccessfully ran for the 2016 Republican presidential nomination, will headline a town-hall style event March 27 at the New Hampshire Institute of Politics, a must-stop on the presidential campaign trail.

 

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AROUND THE WORLD

AMMO DEAL — The EU is finalizing a €2 billion deal to jointly restock Ukraine’s dwindling ammunition supplies while refilling countries’ stocks, according to documents obtained by POLITICO .

The plan includes spending €1 billion to partially reimburse countries that can immediately donate ammunition from their own stockpiles. The countries will also work together to jointly purchase €1 billion in new ammunition — the idea being that together they can negotiate bigger contracts at a lower price-per-shell. The deal has come together rapidly in recent weeks in response to Ukraine’s pleas for more ammunition.

SERBIA’S FAR RIGHT — Serbia’s ultra-nationalists are using Russia’s invasion of Ukraine to galvanize their campaign against Kosovo’s independence — and anti-war activists are getting caught in the crossfire, reports Bennet Murray for POLITICO Europe .

Politicians on Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić’s right flank have sniffed out an opportunity to tie Russia’s war on Ukraine to their desire to swallow up Kosovo, even as Vučić engages in EU-brokered negotiations to partially normalize relations with Kosovo, the independence of which neither Belgrade nor Moscow recognize. A victory for Russian President Vladimir Putin in Ukraine is a stepping stone to Serbia regaining Kosovo, according to Miša Vacić, the leader of the highly nationalistic, pro-Kremlin Serbian Right political party.

 

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NIGHTLY NUMBER

180,000

The number of barrels of oil per day the massive ConocoPhillips endeavor, called the Willow project, is expected to produce at its peak inside the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska.

RADAR SWEEP

AGGRIEVED ELITES  There’s a growing sense in America that many people — in particular the college educated and relatively financially secure — are nevertheless deeply unsatisfied with their societal status. Freddie deBoer, writing for the Substack conglomerate Persuasion , argues that this is related in part to something called “elite overproduction,” the theory that the United States is currently in a phase where we are producing more people with elite “credentials” than we have the economic opportunities to grant “elite privileges.” Read the argument here .

PARTING IMAGE

A message from Alibaba:

Last year, U.S. businesses sold a record $66 billion in products to consumers in China on Alibaba’s e-commerce platforms, a nearly 10% increase over 2021. This included sales from thousands of American brands, big and small, such as boscia and Fender.

Read how American businesses selling on Alibaba impacts the U.S. economy.

 

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