It's hard to time this market, or any market imo. People calling a recession? Sure, but they don't know. All the suite and tie economists call this and call that to get airtime (TV, not on a plane lol). They don't know. Some 10% get lucky and get it right and they'll say "look, I told you so." The other 90% - well, we won't hear from them again until they have something else to say that will get them time on CNN, FOX or where ever they want to put their face.
Airplane prices: I already see a lot more good deals than I did six months ago. Some owners still demand $40k for a washed up Cessna 150. I doubt they'll sell. As some suggested, many of the planes that are overpriced will be taken off market and the poor plane will rot on the ramp. Hopefully a few years down the road, they'll become part donors for us who try to keep their planes flying.
Over the last 12 months, I bought two planes and I think I bought them at very reasonable prices. Deals are out there. If you want to buy a plane, don't rush it but keep your eyes open regardless of what "the market" does. Even in bad markets there are deals. Real world example:
I owned an Ercoupe and then we adopted an adorable puppy who was quickly growing into a big ol' 60 lbs dog. The Ercoupe became too small so I sold it last year for the exact same amount I bought it for two years prior ($27,500). I then started looking for a plane with decent useful load, preferably a Cherokee. That was last year in August. Nothing decent on the market. Everything was way too overpriced. In August, I saw a Cessna 172 for sale, engine TBO'd but fresh annual and seller wanted $25k. I called a day after the listing went live and the plane was gone. Market dry again. Then, I saw a local Cessna 150. Engine was approaching TBO. Seller wanted $22k, I offered $20k, no contingencies and he took it. I immediately gave the plane to my mechanic for an annual and nothing was wrong with the plane, other than looking a bit rough. I cleaned it up, patched the seats, painted the interior and flew the plane for 30ish hours, getting some ratings I was working on and just traveling. Sure, it wasn't a Cherokee but it had more space than the Ercoupe and puppy was still growing, about 35 lbs at the time so good enough to keep me flying while looking for a longer term plane. Then, in December a Cherokee came up. Low time engine, average time airframe, terrible looking interior. Seller wanted $35k, living about seven hours away. I called within an hour of the listing going live. Seller said he already got 7 calls - first person to pay a deposit will get the plane. I send him a deposit and signed purchasing agreement within an hour with one condition. He (or someone he knows) delivers the plane to me. He agreed. A week later, his buddy made the seven hour flight and delivered the plane. Once again, first thing I did was bringing it to the mechanic for an annual and new interior work. Plane didn't need anything major. The new interior (well, not really new - I bought a used interior in good shape - although the new carpet is really new) and first annual came out to $5,000. Had two other minor issues with it early on (tachometer and fuel selector valve) which cost me another $3,000 so essentially the plane ended up costing me $43k. Still a good $20k less than anything else I saw (or still see) with similar hours on the engine. Oh, and the Cessna 150, I ended up selling for $27k less than six months after I bought it for $20k. Funnily enough, even at $27k it was the lowest priced 150 on the market at that time.
Bottom line, if you're waiting for "the market" to come down, you'll keep postponing. It's just another excuse to not buy a plane. If you really want to buy a plane, don't look at the market, keep your eyes open for deals. You can make good deals during bad markets and you can make bad deals during good markets.