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Goldman Sachs raises odds of US recession to 45pc, second hike in a week


US recession

Goldman Sachs has raised the odds of a U.S. recession to 45 percent from 35 percent, the second time it has increased its forecast in a week amid a growing chorus of such predictions by investment banks due to an escalating trade war.

Goldman has raised its estimate from 20 percent early last week on fears that U.S. President Donald Trump’s planned tariffs would roil the global economy. Days later, Trump announced steeper-than-expected duties, which have ignited a sell-off in global markets.

Wall St Week Ahead-Shell-shocked markets brace for more tariff tumult

Since then at least seven top investment banks have raised their recession risk forecasts, with J.P.Morgan putting the odds of a U.S. and global recession at 60 percent, on fears that the tariffs will not only ignite U.S. inflation but also spark retaliatory measures from other countries, as China has already announced.

Goldman, on Sunday, lowered its U.S. economic growth outlook for 2025 to 1.3 percent from 1.5 percent. That, though, is higher than Wells Fargo Investment Institute’s (WFII) 1% growth forecast, while J.P.Morgan estimates a 0.3% contraction, on a quarterly basis.

SOONER RATE CUTS

Goldman still expects the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates by 25 basis points each in three consecutive meetings. However, it now expects the first of them to come in June, not July.

J.P.Morgan expects a rate cut in each of the five Fed meetings left in 2025, with another cut in January taking the benchmark policy rate to 3%.

It had previously expected the Fed to lower rates twice this year from its current policy rate of 4.25%-4.50%.

WFII now expects three rate cuts this year, instead of one.

Traders, on average, expect 116 basis points of rate cuts this year, implying a rate cut in at least four of the remaining five meetings, according to data compiled by LSEG.

BrokerageUS recession odds after tariffsUS recession odds before tariffs
J.P.Morgan60%40%
Goldman Sachs45%35%
S&P Global30-35%25%
HSBC40%

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