A flock of "Grey Swans" will determine how soon the world economy can take flight.
Adding a twist to Nassim Taleb's infamous "Black Swans" — troublesome events with huge consequences that are largely unexpected — WPP Plc Chief Executive Officer Martin Sorrell has frequently spotted the lighter shaded bird that resembles challenges for executives and investors that are well known about beforehand even if the outcome is still hard to predict.
On Sorrell's latest list are doubts over when the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates and what the fallout will be in financial markets. He's also concerned by the referendum on whether the U.K. should leave the European Union that is slated to be held by the end of 2017.
Such obstacles, alongside already weak growth and inflation, mean clients are "unwilling to take further risks," Sorrell's WPP, the world's largest advertisement agency, said last week.
Similarly concerned about animal spirits among executives are the economists at JPMorgan Chase & Co., who are relying on an improvement in the health of companies to pep up the world economy in the current quarter after the summer swoon.
Spooked leaders
Like Sorrell, they also fret business leaders have been spooked by recent events. Their worries are topped by the downdraft in emerging markets alongside the slowdown and August devaluation in China.
"The concern is the corporate sector is looking at the global backdrop and asking is something going to break and does it want to be expanding or should it sit tight and wait to see how things shake out," said Joseph Lupton, an economist at JPMorgan in New York. "That's the story still playing out."
There was some positive news on Monday when manufacturers around the world reported an increase in activity in October. While the U.S.'s purchasing managers' index stagnated and gauge for China signaled contracted, the overall global measure bounced from its lowest since September 2013 to 51.4, according to JPMorgan. Of the 24 countries that have reported data, 15 registered increases.
The move up is "sending an encouraging — albeit still-early — sign that the unusual funk global manufacturing has been in for most of this year is turning a corner," said Lupton.