

Jim Paulsen on Growth, the Fed and the Case for a Broadening Rally
18 snips Aug 28, 2025
Jim Paulsen, Chief Investment Strategist at Paulsen Perspectives, dives into the nuances of the economy and market dynamics. He discusses why recession fears might be overstated, despite slow GDP growth and employment challenges. Jim highlights the divergence in valuations between the S&P 500 and small/mid-cap firms and argues that inflation concerns could be overblown. He also offers insights on Federal Reserve policies, suggesting that easing could lead to a broader market recovery, as many companies remain undervalued.
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Growth Is Weak But Not Necessarily Recessionary
- Real GDP growth averaged about 1% annualized in H1 and is dangerously close to recession territory. Jim Paulsen highlights the pace as weak even though recession remains unlikely.
Big Deficits Yet Contractionary Dollar Policy
- Fiscal policy has been large and steady, but tariffs and a strong dollar act contractionary. Paulsen calls the last 15 years an unusually contractionary dollar policy despite recent modest dollar declines.
Monetary Conditions Still Tight
- Monetary conditions remain tight: low real money growth, an inverted yield curve, and long-term yields similar to peak-inflation levels. Paulsen argues these are major contractionary forces holding growth down.