Goldman holds recession odds at 30% — now the most optimistic forecaster as Moody's sits at 48.6%.
Fortune reported Goldman's 30% as its third upward revision of 2026; WSJ noted the bank projects 12% earnings growth alongside it.
X analysts are comparing Goldman's 30% to Moody's 48.6%, EY-Parthenon's 40%, and Wilmington Trust's 45%, arguing Goldman is clinging to optimism the data no longer supports.
Goldman Sachs has not moved. For the second consecutive week, the bank's 12-month U.S. recession probability holds at 30% -- its third upward revision of 2026, from 15% in January to 20% in early March to the current figure [1]. As this paper reported Thursday, the bank cites three reinforcing headwinds: oil sustained above $100, cumulative tariff drag, and the DHS shutdown now approaching its 50th day.
The landscape around Goldman has shifted. Moody's Analytics sits at 48.6%. EY-Parthenon is at 40%. Wilmington Trust is at 45%. Polymarket prediction contracts have recession at 39.2% [2]. Goldman, at 30%, is now the most optimistic major forecaster -- a position the bank's own economists did not anticipate occupying. The same April note that holds the 30% figure also projects 12% corporate earnings growth, a tension that several X analysts flagged as internally contradictory [3].
The number has not gone down. The peer group has gone up around it. When Goldman is the optimist in the room, the room has changed.
-- THEO KAPLAN, San Francisco