To be fair, unless you're a Boomer (or especially if you are), most folks have been in "uncharted territory", their whole lives.
But too many people are conflating multi-decade QE doomsday drivel with what's happened the last 12-16 months.
Covid sickness closing down meat packing plants - higher brisket cost has nothing to do with actual inflation
Lumber prices skyrocketing and then crashing - higher new home builds as folks moved out of high priced cities, then existing home sales...and now, rising rents as folks get priced out (another reason to think things will snap back)...one-off reaction that has nothing to do with actual inflation
Federal unemployment kicker payments - paid more to stay at home and now raising labor costs...government-induced but has nothing to do with actual (market-driven) inflation
By and large any "recession" we saw was government induced. Likewise, any inflation we're seeing is a release we're seeing from those restrictions, and a little government intervention too (wages)
Funny how most people worry about inflation more than recession as if they are separate conditions...but that's another discussion altogether
But, yes, some of my fellow experienced Wall Street colleagues agree with me, and some disagree
That's why and how markets trade
The above references an opinion and is for information purposes only. It is not intended to be investment advice. Seek a duly licensed professional for investment advice.