The Stock Market Crashed. Here's What Could Follow

 | Mar 12, 2020 07:15AM ET

The dramatic slide in the US stock market in recent days is effectively a forecast that an economic recession is fate. The assumed catalyst: coronavirus blowback. No one can dismiss this risk, but at the moment there are no hard numbers to confirm that a US recession is near. Nonetheless, it’s all but certain that growth will slow, perhaps significantly. Deciding if the economy will contract, however, remains debatable. Mr. Market, however, is assuming the worst with an aggressive round of discounting the future. The challenge in the days and weeks ahead is determining if the incoming economic data support the market’s worst fears.

The good news is that the US economy is flying into the storm with a moderate rate of growth. CapitalSpectator.com’s current first-quarter nowcast for GDP is +1.9%, based on the median for several estimates (see chart below). That’s up slightly from the previous estimate (published Feb. 18), which suggests that economic growth was steady if not firming up before the coronavirus smackdown begins to bite.