Economic Tailwinds Fade: Savings Depletion, Declining Lending Raise Concerns

 | Jul 20, 2023 12:45AM ET

Back in March, I wrote about the pandemic-era savings glut and why it was premature to discuss an impending recession as long as it remained.

But have no doubt, that massive $2.1-to-2.3 trillion build-up in consumer savings post-2020 is vanishing.

And it’s nearly gone at this point.

This excess was a huge tailwind for growth – as consumers splurged with their built-up government handouts and pent-up savings.

But it couldn’t last forever.

Or put simply, it was on borrowed time.

And even if it reverts to 2019 (pre-pandemic) levels, that’s still a considerable decline in consumption as consumers must stop drawing down their savings and instead rebuild them.

Why?

Because when there’s more debt outstanding, it requires more income and savings to repay it. Meaning less consumption.

Remember, you can only do things with a single dollar. Save or dissave (consume/repay debts).

But there’s another way consumers can keep spending – and that’s with debt (which is negative savings).

Thus it’s important to take a look at both the excess savings estimates and bank credit trends.

And with both declining quickly, I believe the second half of 2023 and early 2024 could show increasing fragility. . .

So let’s take a closer look. . .

The Pandemic Era Excess Savings Is Near Depleted

To give you some brief context, after the COVID-19 pandemic began in Q1-2020, the U.S. household saw an ungodly surge in savings and financial support.

The U.S. government gave out roughly $5 trillion in handouts – through direct stimulus checks, expanded unemployment insurance, child tax credits, business loans (PPP loans), and various other programs.

Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve poured gas on the fire by cutting interest rates and launching massive bond-buying programs. Expanding their own balance sheet to over $4.9 trillion within two years.

Thus liquidity was more than plentiful. And U.S. households saw a dramatic rise in buying power.

And over time, consumers began spending this dramatic build-up in savings.

This fueled ‘demand pull’ inflation (aka when there’s greater buying relative to supply) and economic growth.

But after two-and-a-half years, that tailwind is nearly gone. . .

For instance – according to JP Morgan – household accumulated excess savings is roughly $500 billion as of Q1-2023. Down from the $2.15 trillion peak in August 2021. And will most likely run out by October 2023 (at this current pace).