US Business Cycle Risk Report: February 17, 2017

 | Feb 17, 2017 07:21AM ET

Political risk may be on the rise, but the US economy began 2017 on a strong note. As projected in previous months, macro momentum has strengthened, pushing recession risk down to a virtually nil reading for January. Looking ahead, the near-term estimates through next month suggest that the favorable tail wind will continue.

Data published to date from several sources continues to show that an current analysis (as of Feb. 16) anticipates that the economy will expand by 2.4% in the first three months of this year, mildly above the 1.9% rate in last year’s Q4.

Note that some analysts are warning that recession risk is due to rise in this year’s second half. They may or may not be right, but keep in mind that economic predictions that look beyond one or two months into the future are highly speculative. Based on what we now right now, and making conservative projections through next month, offers minimal support for expecting the US economy will slip over to the dark side. The analysis can change, of course, and perhaps quickly, which is why monitoring the incoming data and routinely re-running the analytics is crucial. For the moment, however, the broad trend still looks positive.

Using the numbers in hand, The Capital Spectator’s proprietary business-cycle indexes continue to reflect a low probability that a downturn is imminent. For the nearly complete January profile, only two indicators in our model are signaling weakness: oil prices (via sharply higher prices in year-over-year terms) and a contraction in the monetary base in real terms. Otherwise, a bullish trend prevails. (For a more comprehensive read on business-cycle analysis on a weekly basis, see The US Business Cycle Risk Report .)