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In this episode of Prof G Markets, economist Mark Zandi from Moody's Analytics delivers sobering analysis on America's economic state, describing an economy "on the precipice of recession" despite appearing strong on the surface. Zandi reveals his machine learning recession indicator shows a 49% probability of downturn within twelve months—just shy of the 50% threshold that has historically predicted every recession since 1960 with zero false positives (09:40). He attributes the economic struggles to policy missteps, particularly tariffs which have raised the effective rate from 2% to 10% this year (12:22), immigration restrictions, and government cuts—policies that his models suggest have cut potential GDP growth in half. Most concerning is Zandi's warning about Federal Reserve independence under threat, positioning this alongside potential bond market meltdowns as top risks in his "what keeps me up at night" matrix, while acknowledging the unprecedented challenge of maintaining objective economic analysis in an increasingly politicized environment (47:07).
Chief economist at Moody's Analytics and host of the Inside Economics podcast. He serves on the board of directors of MGIC, the nation's largest private mortgage insurance company, bringing over 35 years of professional economics expertise to his forecasting work.
Host of Prophecy Markets from the Vox Media Podcast Network. He leads economic discussions and analysis, focusing on market trends and policy implications for high-achieving professionals and investors.
Moody's machine learning recession model sits at 49% probability—historically, breaching 50% has perfectly predicted every downturn since 1960. Monitor leading indicators across multiple sources: yield curve inversion, consumer confidence, and the critical metric where 53% of industries are now reducing payrolls. (09:42)
As government data collection deteriorates (35% of CPI is now imputed vs. 10% earlier), create independent verification systems. Partner with credit processors, payroll companies, and web-scraping initiatives to triangulate official statistics—treating all data as "trust but verify." (57:00)
A meltdown in long-term bonds represents the highest combined probability-severity risk. With debt-to-GDP at 100%, deficits at 6% of GDP, and hedge funds replacing institutional buyers, prepare for 10-year yields potentially jumping from 4.25% to 6%. The Fed chair nomination will be the critical catalyst. (44:36)
Run scenario models showing economic performance with and without current policies. Tariffs alone reduce GDP growth by ~1 percentage point, cutting potential 2.2% growth to 1.1%. Every percentage point increase in effective tariff rates subtracts 7-8 basis points from subsequent year's growth. (14:05)
When economic analysis becomes politicized, anchor to quantitative models and transparent assumptions. Focus on broad consensus positions (like trade economics) where professional agreement transcends political divisions. Create multiple scenario frameworks to separate baseline forecasts from risk assessments. (47:27)