No V-Shaped Recovery, Says Dr. Doom
Courtesy of Lawrence Delevingne at ClusterStock
A "V" shaped comeback? Dr. Doom ain’t buying it.
Last week, Nouriel Roubini was slightly bullish, predicting a global recovery by the end of the year — with plenty of caveats. But today, with the markets down, the recession-caller and NYU economist is back to his signature pessimism:
Roubini/RGE: Today, 20 months into the US recession—a recession that became global in the summer of 2008 with a massive recoupling—the V-shaped decoupling view is out the window. This is the worst US and global recession in 60 years. If the US recession were—as is most likely—to be over at the end of the year, it will have been three times as long and about fives times as deep—in terms of the cumulative decline in output—as the previous two.
So, the end of this severe global recession will be closer at the end of this year than it is now, the recovery will be anaemic rather than robust in advanced economies, and there is a rising risk of a double-dip recession. The recent market rallies in stocks, commodities and credit may have gotten ahead of the improvement in the real economy. If so, a correction cannot be too far behind.