Soft Landing Scenario: Possibility or Fed Myth?

 | Jan 27, 2023 02:34PM ET

Optimism is increasing on Wall Street, with investors hoping for a soft landing in the economy.

The hope is that despite the Fed hiking rates at the most aggressive pace since 1980, reducing its balance sheet via quantitative tightening, and inflation running at the highest levels since the 70s, the economy will continue to power forward.

Is there such a possibility or is the soft landing scenario another Fed myth?

To answer that question, we need a definition of a soft landing scenario, economically speaking.

“A soft landing, in economics, is a cyclical slowdown in economic growth that avoids a recession. A soft landing is the goal of a central bank when it seeks to raise interest rates just enough to stop an economy from overheating and experiencing high inflation without causing a severe downturn.” – Investopedia

The term soft landing came to the forefront of Wall Street jargon during Alan Greenspan’s tenure as Fed Chairman. He was widely credited with engineering a soft landing in 1994-1995. The media has also pointed to the Federal Reserve engineering soft landings economically in both 1984 and 2018.

The chart below shows the Fed rate hiking cycle with soft landings notated by orange shading. I have also noted the events that preceded the “hard landings.”