Business Cycle
Business Cycle
The recurring pattern of expansion and contraction in economic activity, consisting of four phases: expansion, peak, contraction (recession), and trough. Cycles vary in length and intensity, with expansion phases typically lasting longer than contraction phases.
During the 2008-2009 contraction, unemployment peaked near 10% at the trough before declining during the subsequent expansion phase that lasted over a decade.
Students often confuse the peak (highest point of economic activity) with the trough (lowest point). Remember: peak precedes contraction, trough precedes expansion.
How This Is Tested
- Identifying the four phases of the business cycle (expansion, peak, contraction, trough)
- Understanding economic characteristics of each phase (GDP growth, unemployment, inflation)
- Recognizing appropriate investment strategies and sector rotation for different cycle phases
- Determining which economic indicators lead, lag, or coincide with business cycle changes
- Understanding that cycles are recurring but irregular in length and severity
Regulatory Limits
| Description | Limit | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Recession definition (technical) | 2 consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth | Commonly used definition for identifying recessions |
| Recession dating authority | National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) | NBER officially dates business cycle peaks and troughs, considering multiple economic indicators beyond just GDP |
Example Exam Questions
Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.
Jennifer, a portfolio manager, reviews economic data showing declining GDP for two consecutive quarters, rising unemployment, and falling corporate profits. Consumer confidence is at multi-year lows. Which investment strategy would be most appropriate for her clients during this phase of the business cycle?
B is correct. The economic indicators (two consecutive quarters of negative GDP, rising unemployment, falling profits, low consumer confidence) signal a contraction or recession phase. During contraction, defensive sectors like utilities and consumer staples tend to outperform because they provide essential goods and services with stable demand regardless of economic conditions.
A is incorrect because cyclical stocks (manufacturing, construction, discretionary retail) perform poorly during contractions as consumer spending declines. C is incorrect because the economy is contracting, not at peak growth. equity allocation should be reduced, not maximized. D is incorrect because an all-or-nothing commodity strategy lacks diversification and commodities can be volatile during recessions.
The Series 65 exam tests your ability to recognize business cycle phases from economic indicators and recommend appropriate portfolio adjustments. Understanding sector rotation (moving to defensive sectors during contractions) is critical for making suitable investment recommendations that align with economic conditions.
At which phase of the business cycle is unemployment typically at its highest level?
D is correct. Unemployment reaches its highest level at the trough, which is the lowest point of economic activity in the business cycle. The trough marks the end of the contraction phase and the beginning of recovery.
A (Expansion) is when unemployment decreases as economic activity increases and businesses hire more workers. B (Peak) is the highest point of economic activity where unemployment is typically at its lowest level. C (Contraction) sees rising unemployment as businesses reduce workforce, but unemployment continues climbing until reaching the trough.
The Series 65 exam frequently tests knowledge of economic indicators across business cycle phases. Understanding that unemployment is a lagging indicator that peaks at the trough helps advisers time portfolio adjustments and set realistic client expectations during economic transitions.
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Access Free BetaAn economy reports GDP growth of +3.2% in Q1, +2.8% in Q2, -0.8% in Q3, and -1.2% in Q4. Based on the technical definition of a recession, in which quarter did the economy enter a recession?
C is correct. A recession is technically defined as two consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth. Q3 showed the first negative quarter (-0.8%), and Q4 showed the second consecutive negative quarter (-1.2%). The recession is officially recognized at the end of Q4 when the second consecutive quarter of negative growth is confirmed.
A (Q2) is incorrect because Q2 showed positive growth (+2.8%), not negative. B (Q3) is incorrect because only one quarter of negative growth had occurred. you need two consecutive quarters to meet the technical definition. D is incorrect because both Q3 and Q4 showed negative growth, meeting the recession criteria.
The Series 65 exam tests your ability to apply economic definitions to real data. Understanding the "two consecutive quarters" rule for recessions helps advisers identify contraction phases, communicate market conditions to clients, and adjust investment strategies appropriately during economic downturns.
All of the following are typical characteristics of the expansion phase of the business cycle EXCEPT
D is correct (the EXCEPT answer). During expansion, cyclical sectors (technology, consumer discretionary, industrials) typically outperform defensive sectors (utilities, consumer staples, healthcare) because economic growth drives demand for discretionary goods and services. Defensive sectors tend to outperform during contraction, not expansion.
A is accurate: expansion features rising GDP and increasing corporate profits as economic activity accelerates. B is accurate: unemployment declines during expansion as businesses expand operations and hire more workers to meet growing demand. C is accurate: consumer confidence rises during expansion, leading to increased consumer spending and further economic growth.
The Series 65 exam tests your comprehensive understanding of business cycle characteristics to distinguish between expansion and contraction phases. Recognizing that sector performance rotates with economic cycles is essential for portfolio management and making appropriate sector allocation recommendations.
An economic analyst reviews data showing GDP growth has turned negative for the first time in 8 years, unemployment has started rising from historic lows, and the Federal Reserve has begun cutting interest rates. Which of the following statements about the current business cycle phase are accurate?
1. The economy is transitioning from peak to contraction
2. Stock prices for cyclical companies will likely outperform defensive stocks
3. Corporate profits are likely declining from recent highs
4. This is an appropriate time to increase allocation to growth equities
A is correct. Only statements 1 and 3 are accurate.
Statement 1 is TRUE: The combination of negative GDP growth (after 8 years of expansion), rising unemployment (from historic lows), and Fed rate cuts signals the economy is transitioning from peak into the contraction phase.
Statement 2 is FALSE: During contraction, defensive stocks (utilities, consumer staples, healthcare) typically outperform cyclical stocks (discretionary retail, construction, manufacturing) because defensive sectors provide essential goods with stable demand regardless of economic conditions.
Statement 3 is TRUE: Corporate profits decline during contraction as consumer demand weakens, sales decrease, and businesses face pricing pressure. The phrase "declining from recent highs" indicates the economy was recently at peak levels.
Statement 4 is FALSE: Contraction is not an appropriate time to increase growth equity allocation. Growth stocks are typically more volatile and suffer during economic downturns. Investors usually reduce equity exposure and shift to defensive positions during contraction.
The Series 65 exam tests your ability to synthesize multiple economic indicators to identify business cycle phases and make appropriate investment recommendations. Understanding how GDP trends, employment data, Fed policy, sector performance, and corporate profits interact across cycle phases is critical for comprehensive portfolio management.
💡 Memory Aid
Think of the business cycle as a roller coaster: It climbs (Expansion), reaches the top (Peak), drops down (Contraction/Recession), hits bottom (Trough), then climbs again. Remember: unemployment is LOWEST at the Peak (everyone has jobs at the top!) and HIGHEST at the Trough (layoffs have accumulated at the bottom).
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Where This Appears on the Exam
This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics: