Economic Cycle and Asset Rotation: Early, Mid, Late, Recession
Map the four economic cycle phases to outperforming assets — early-cycle stocks and industrials, late-cycle commodities, and recession bonds.
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The economic cycle — expansion and contraction in real GDP — rotates leadership across asset classes. Rotating with it, rather than holding a static allocation, is the foundation of sector rotation strategies.
The Four Phases
- Early (Recovery): GDP accelerates from a trough with accommodative policy. Outperforming: consumer discretionary, industrials, materials, financials. Underperforming: utilities, staples. The curve is steep; rates low and stable.
- Mid (Expansion): growth above trend and broadening; employment and capex strong. Outperforming: technology, communication services, industrials. Policy normalizes; the curve flattens.
- Late (Peak): growth decelerates, inflation rises, policy tightens. Outperforming: energy, materials, commodities. Underperforming: consumer discretionary, housing, long-duration growth. The curve flattens or inverts.
- Recession (Contraction): GDP contracts, earnings decline, unemployment rises, policy eases. Outperforming: duration (bonds), utilities, staples, healthcare. Underperforming: financials, industrials, discretionary, high-yield credit. The curve steepens from the front end.
Rotation Mechanics
The classic Merrill Lynch Investment Clock maps the cycle to a clock face: bonds at 12, stocks at 3, commodities at 6, cash at 9, rotating clockwise. Phase boundaries blur, and exogenous shocks (pandemics, wars) can compress or skip phases.
Practical Indicators
| Indicator | Early | Mid | Late | Recession |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ISM PMI | <50→>50 rising | >52 stable | peaking, >55 rolling | <50 falling |
| Yield curve (10y−2y) | Steep | Flat | Inverted | Steepening |
| Unemployment | Falling | Low/stable | Trough | Rising |
| Core CPI | Low, rising | Stable | Rising | Falling |
| High-yield OAS | Wide, tightening | Tight | Tightening→widening | Wide |
Tactical Tilt and Common Errors
A rule-based tilt rotates the equity sleeve to the phase's outperforming sector group and shifts 10–20% into bonds in late cycle. US backtests since 1973 show sector rotation adding 1–2% annualized over a static 60/40, with higher turnover. Lead with PMI, the curve, and credit spreads — GDP confirms phases months late. Easing into recession supports duration and defensives, not cyclicals.
Action Points
- Build a one-page phase dashboard updated monthly with the five lead indicators.
- Tilt equity exposure to the phase's outperforming sector group; do not abandon diversification.
- Move 10–20% of the book into duration in late cycle; reduce duration in early cycle.
- Track high-yield credit spreads — widening is the earliest reliable late-to-recession signal.
Economic cycle rotation is a tactical overlay, not a replacement for security selection. Its edge is in avoiding the worst sector for the current phase, not in predicting the exact boundary.
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