A better signal of recession is the cost of private credit, not necessarily the yield curve, says Charles Gave.
Investors need to brace for a late-cycle market dynamic, the company said.
One analyst sees selling pressure in the cryptocurrency market easing after April 15.
From rising rates to slowing growth, risks are multiplying.
The bank puts the odds of a recession in the next year at 18 percent.
Goldman’s base-case scenario calls for a 10-year yield of 3.25 percent by the end of 2018.
Cohen said Washington's global policies won't support sustainable intermediate and long-term economic growth.
Outflows amounted to 8 percent of the fund’s total assets at the start of last week.
He sees 10-year Treasury yields moving above 3 percent later in 2018.
Credit market imbalances and cryptocurrencies will shadow an otherwise robust 2018 economy, says Goldman's Jan Hatzius.