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Scenario × Asset Analysis

What Happens to Russell 2000 ETF (IWM) When GDP Contracts?

What happens to markets, policy, and the economy when real GDP contracts? Historical playbook for recession quarters, with current data.

Russell 2000 ETF (IWM)
$268.71
as of Apr 14, 2026
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Trigger: Real GDP
$24B
Condition: shows negative quarterly growth
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How Russell 2000 ETF (IWM) Responds

Small caps underperform in recessions due to higher leverage, domestic-cyclical exposure, and credit-access sensitivity. Typical relative drawdown of 500-1000 bps vs large caps.

Scenario Background

Real GDP contraction (negative quarter-over-quarter annualized growth) is the most widely-tracked signal that economic activity is shrinking. While two consecutive quarters of contraction is the colloquial "technical recession" definition, the NBER Business Cycle Dating Committee uses a broader framework incorporating income, employment, and industrial production.

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Historical Context

Every NBER-dated recession since 1947 has featured at least one contracting quarter. The 2008-2009 Great Recession saw four consecutive contractions totaling roughly -4% peak-to-trough. The 2020 COVID recession produced a single catastrophic Q2 contraction of -31% annualized, followed by a record Q3 rebound. The 2022 "technical recession" (Q1 and Q2 negative) was eventually not classified as an NBER recession because income, employment, and industrial production stayed firm. The 1973-1975 recess...

What to Watch For

  • Two consecutive negative quarters confirming recession dynamics
  • Unemployment rising 0.5+ percentage points from its cycle low
  • ISM Manufacturing below 45 confirming factory recession
  • Yield curve un-inverting as Fed pivots to cuts
  • Leading Economic Index six-month change exceeding negative 2%

Other Assets When GDP Contracts

Other Scenarios Affecting Russell 2000 ETF (IWM)

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