Pimco Sees ‘Flashing Orange’ US Recession Signal

Chance of U.S. downturn 30% in next 12 months, a nine-year high, says the bond giant, which oversees $1.7 trillion.

U.S. growth will slow and the risks of a recession climb in 2019 as the near-decade-long economic cycle ages, according to Pacific Investment Management Co.

“The probability of a U.S. recession over the next 12 months has risen to about 30 percent recently and is thus higher than at any point in this nine-year-old expansion,” Pimco economist Joachim Fels and Andrew Balls, global fixed-income chief investment officer, wrote in an outlook released Thursday. “Even so, the models are flashing orange rather than red.”

The note, “Synching Lower,” is based on discussions at a forum this month of economists and portfolio managers to guide investments for the coming six to 12 months. Newport Beach, California-based Pimco manages about $1.7 trillion.

Pimco Chief Investment Officer Dan Ivascyn, in a Bloomberg Radio interview Thursday, warned that next year will be as rocky as this one.

“The last few months have given us a sense of the types of risks that are out there, that both the economy and markets are going to face in 2019,” Ivascyn said. “At a minimum, like we have seen this year, expect ongoing volatility and that’s true across all segments of the financial markets.”

The CIO still sees some attractive opportunities for 2019 in emerging markets even after they have performed well in the last few months. “Along with fear being reduced, spreads have tightened and prices have gone up,” he said. “We continue to be active in emerging markets.”

Among the key calls in the outlook:

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