How Should Investors Prepare For The Credit Cycle’s Retreat?

 | Sep 25, 2016 01:49AM ET

An economy begins to grow, picks up steam, peaks, slows down, and eventually contracts. The process is known as the business cycle – an inevitable progression from expansion to recession to renewal and recovery.

Central bank policy makers have been trying to eliminate recessions from the picture since the 1990s. Some folks believe that their prescriptions – lowering overnight lending rates, buying assets with electronic credits, etc. – have been effective. After all, the three economic expansions from July 1990 to June 2009 averaged nearly eight years whereas the previous average period of economic growth chimed in closer to six years.

On closer inspection, however, what did the United States Federal Reserve actually achieve by pushing recessionary forces further out into the future? They did not stop recessions from occurring outright. On the contrary. While they may occur with less frequency, they are occurring with more ferocity.

Consider the Fed’s free-spirited monetary accommodation in the late 1990s. At the latter stages, Fed policy encouraged the boom and the bust surrounding dot-com stock mania in 2000, while the deeply painful 2001 recession still came to fruition. Then the Fed did it again. They depressed rates for far too long in the mid-2000s, fueling the ridiculously speculative excesses in the U.S. housing market. The Fed may have pushed the recession further out into the future, but they only created a more toxic environment for the Great Recession of 2008 to breed.

Perhaps ironically, some investors seemed to have learned very little from either 2000 or 2008. And the central banks clear across the globe? They’ve learned even less. They continue to push policies like zero percent interest rates, asset purchases with electronic money credits, negative interest rates, none of which have actually done a lot for economic performance itself. What have they done? Encouraged extreme speculation and exorbitant asset prices that allow for a portion of respective populations to feel wealthier. At least for now. At least until the credit boom comes unglued.

Like a business cycle’s expansion that cannot last indefinitely, a credit cycle also transitions from growth to boom to slowdown to bust. If a homeowner has very little skin in a mortgage (and many have a meager 3% down) – the loan is likely to end in default should one household wage earner lose a reasonable paying job. More problematic in the current environment? Poor credit risk corporations whose bonds are often called “junk” eventually find themselves in default.