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Can the US Decouple from the Eurozone?

The OECD cut forecasts for 2012.  Via the Wall Street Journal:

The Paris-based think tank cut its forecasts among its 34 members to 1.9% this year and 1.6% in 2012, from 2.3% and 2.8% in May. The OECD said it expects the euro zone’s economy to contract by 1% at an annualized rate in the last quarter of this year and by 0.4% in the first three months of 2012.

For 2012, the OECD said the 17-country bloc’s economy will only grow by 0.2%.

This is far too optimistic.  The European economy is about to fall over a cliff, and last week’s Eurostat report on new industrial orders reveals that manufacturing is leading the way.  New orders fell by a whopping 6.4%, a move that hearkens back to the darkest days of 2008.  Will the US be able to resist the pull of the European downturn?  These charts don’t offer much optimism:

Fedwatch1

Fedwatch2

Not a perfect match, but enough to suggest the idea of substantial decoupling looks like more myth than reality, especially in the face of a severe recession.  Could this be why US Treasury yields held steady today even as equities roared forward?

Bottom Line:  Don’t take US resilience for granted this time around – Europe is getting ugly, and it is far too late to prevent severe recession.  The best policymakers can hope for at this point is too avoid a depression.

This post originally appeared at Tim Duy’s Fed Watch and is posted with permission.

One Response to “Can the US Decouple from the Eurozone?”

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