“Optimism that we will start to see a recovery in the economy…neutralizes the recession narrative,” said Tobin Trevarthen, the CEO of Spatial Shift. He believes that by this time next year, “all the belt-tightening will have happened and the need to stay in front of AI impact will drive decisions to advance the business.”
The idea that the U.S. will escape a recession is driving higher confidence ratings this month, but most of the 181 CEOs surveyed said there are nevertheless signs of a slowdown on the horizon.
“The backlog is drying up,” said one of the CEOs polled. “Our sales team is pessimistic.”
“There’s some weakness in Q2 bookings, so expecting a slower 2H of 2023 that could last a few quarters,” said another.
Even nonprofit organizations report signs of slowing. “Some revenue channels continue to be strong while others are beginning to show cracks,” said the CEO of Northwest Association for Blind Athletes.
The sentiment that growth will slow was widely shared by the CEOs we surveyed this month. Overall, the proportion of those who expect things to continue improving over the coming year dropped to 39 percent in August, from 44 percent in July. Meanwhile, the proportion expecting things to deteriorate increased to 32 percent from 27 percent.
And despite having avoided a recession—for most sectors—growing inventories, the increasing difficulty to raise prices, the high cost of borrowing and the upcoming election year are all listed as concerns for the months ahead.
Still, July had seen a sharp rise in improving forecasts (+59 percent from prior month), and the 12 percent decrease in August, though important, only slightly impacts the overall figure. At 39 percent, the proportion of CEOs who forecast improving conditions by August 2024 remains well above the proportion that had been recorded just one month before, in June (28 percent).