The stock-market
outlook in 2016 is riddled with great
uncertainty following the Fed ending its 7-year-old
zero-interest-rate policy. With the first rate-hike cycle in nearly
a decade just getting underway, traders are anxiously wondering how
it will impact the stock markets. While raising rates out of
ZIRP is radically unprecedented, stock-market reactions during past
rate-hike cycles still offer some interesting insights.
The Federal
Reserve’s monetary-policy decisions are no longer peripheral
concerns for stock-market fortunes. Thanks to the Fed’s extreme
easing of recent years, its actions have usurped everything else to
become the stock markets’ overwhelmingly dominant driver.
And unfortunately the wildly-outsized upside impact on stock prices
by the uber-dovish Fed is highly likely to portend proportional
downside.
This all started
back in late 2008’s once-in-a-century stock panic, when the Bernanke
Fed joined in the panicking. On December 16th, 2008, the Fed’s
Federal Open Market Committee that makes its policy decisions
slashed its benchmark federal-funds-rate target by a staggering 100
basis points (hundredths of a percent) to zero. This was the first
time in the Fed’s entire history since 1913 that it implemented
ZIRP!
But once it
bullies rates to nothing, the Fed hits the zero lower bound
where it can no longer cut rates to attempt to stimulate the
economy. That leaves its final option of money printing, conjuring
up new money out of thin air. Weeks before ZIRP was born, the Fed
was already spinning up its first debt-monetization campaign known
as quantitative easing. This pleasant euphemism obscures the fact
this is pure
inflation.
So since late
2008, the monetary environment in the United States has been
epically unprecedented. The Fed has stormed so far into
uncharted territory that it defies belief. In the last normal year
of 2007, the federal-funds rate averaged 5.0%. That’s right in line
with the
quarter-century average ending that year of 5.5%. During the
subsequent ZIRP years since, the FFR averaged nearly 98% lower at
0.13%!
In 2007 the Fed’s
balance sheet averaged $830b. The Fed’s extreme QE money printing
ever since has ballooned this to an average of $4450b in 2015, a
mind-boggling 5.4x higher! If the Fed had grown its balance sheet
at a reasonable rate around 7% annually, it would only be 1.7x
higher today or $1425b. It’s exceedingly important to remember the
past 7 years’ monetary policy has been the
most extreme ever by far!
Such a crazy-easy
Fed was tremendously bullish for the stock markets, especially
starting in early 2013 when its third quantitative-easing campaign
spun up to full steam. QE3 was very different from its predecessors
in that it was open-ended, with no predetermined size or end
date. Top Fed officials deftly used this to their advantage,
aggressively jawboning the stock markets higher through an implied
Fed Put.
Every time the
stock markets started sliding into a normal healthy pullback, Fed
officials would rush to the podiums to reassure they were ready to
expand QE3’s bond monetizations if necessary. This effective
central-bank backstop seduced stock traders to keep buying back
in, ignoring all normal market indicators. The result was recent
years’ extraordinary Fed-conjured
stock-market
levitation, a wildly-unprecedented anomaly.
Keep these vast
Fed distortions in mind as you consider stock-market behavior during
past Fed-rate-hike cycles. The incredible and
record-setting-in-many-ways stock-market levitation leading into this latest rate-hike cycle was the direct result
of the easiest Fed ever seen by an enormous margin.
So there’s a very high probability the mean-reversion aftermath will
be proportionally as severe and record-setting.
Nevertheless, the
stock markets’ behavior in past Fed-rate-hike cycles is still worth
studying. I recently completed a
deep-research
project looking at every FOMC decision changing its
federal-funds-rate target since 1971. It turns out this
happened a whopping 252 times over this
span! Since the FOMC meets 8 times per year, that works out
to FFR target changes happening at over 2/3rds of the 360ish
meetings.
Provocatively the
Fed doesn’t always hike rates in cycles, a series of multiple
sequential hikes with no intervening cuts. There were 6 times in
that nearly-half-century history where the Fed made one lone hike
that was bracketed by cuts. There were an additional 6 times where
the FFR target was raised twice in succession before it was reduced
again. One or two isolated hikes certainly don’t make a rate-hike
cycle.
The most generous
definition possible for a Fed-rate-hike cycle is 3 or more
consecutive FFR increases with no interrupting decreases. It
turns out the Fed has executed fully 11 of these rate-hike cycles in
the 45 years since 1971. The charts below reveal the benchmark S&P
500 stock index’s performance over the exact spans of these cycles,
starting the days of their first hikes and ending the days of their
last ones.
While all
rate-hike cycles are highlighted in light red, these don’t always
perfectly match the troughs and peaks in the federal-funds rate.
The Fed actually doesn’t directly control the FFR, which is
technically a free-market interest rate determined by federal-funds
supply and demand. Commercial banks use this market to borrow and
lend their required cash reserve deposits held at the Fed on an
overnight basis.
The Fed instead
sets an FFR target, which it then attempts to achieve through
open-market operations where it directly buys and sells in the
federal-funds market. While the Fed’s sophistication in bullying
the FFR to its target has grown over the years, there are still
deviations. Bending the free market to its will can literally take
tens of billions to hundreds of billions of dollars of trading, it
certainly isn’t a trivial task.
A half-dozen key
data points are noted for each Fed-rate-hike cycle. They start at
the top with the total increase in basis points. That’s followed by
the number of individual hikes in each cycle, as well as their
average basis-point increases per hike and per month. After that is
each rate-hike cycle’s duration measured in months, finally followed
by the S&P 500’s performance during each cycle’s exact span.
Recent months’
raging debate about this newest rate-hike
cycle’s likely impact on the stock markets has been something
of a Rorschach test, revealing traders’ inherent biases.
Stock-market bulls argue that Fed rate hikes are bullish for stocks,
because the Fed wouldn’t dare raise rates unless the underlying US
economy is really improving. I’ve heard this case being made
hundreds of times on CNBC recently.
Meanwhile the
stock-market bears believe Fed rate hikes are bearish for stocks
because they mark the end of the easiest monetary policies on record
which levitated the stock markets. Take away the gigantic hot-air
injectors of ZIRP and QE, and the artificial balloon they inflated
shrivels up and collapses. It is rather amusing to see stock
markets’ historical action during past Fed-rate-hike cycles
support neither thesis!
The S&P 500 (SPX)
climbed in the majority 6 of the 11 Fed-rate-hike cycles of the
modern era, with an average gain of 11.1% during these wins. That’s
pretty darned impressive, since the average duration of those
particular rate-hike cycles was just 10.6 months. If that kind of
performance is coming again, the bulls will rejoice. But during the
other 5 cycles, the SPX lost 7.1% over an average duration of 13.5
months.
If the SPX’s
performance during all 11 Fed-rate-hike cycles is averaged together,
it is almost a wash with a mere 2.8% gain. This ambiguous result of
a small upside bias doesn’t show clear direction either way. It’s
fascinating comparing this to gold, which American futures
speculators have been
universally
assuming will be crushed in this
newest Fed-rate-hike cycle. Yet gold vastly outperformed the
SPX in past ones.
Gold’s average
gain during these same 11 Fed-rate-hike cycles of the modern era was
26.9%, nearly an order of magnitude greater than the stock
markets’! Gold also rallied in 6 of these 11, but by a far-greater
average of 61.0%. So while stock markets’ performance in
Fed-rate-hike cycles has been ambiguous and directionless,
gold’s has proved
just the opposite. Stock-market bulls are betting on the wrong
horse.
I was surprised
stock markets’ historical performance during Fed-rate-hike cycles
wasn’t worse. Rising interest rates hit stocks on multiple fronts.
As higher rates increase debt-servicing costs throughout the
economy, there is less money available to buy products and services
from corporations. So rising rates lead to slowing sales,
which are leveraged to a larger downside impact on overall corporate
profitability.
Weaker earnings
raise valuations, making stocks less attractive. On top of that,
higher rates drive up the prevailing yields in the bond markets.
This leads investors to migrate away from riskier dividend-paying
stocks into bonds. Rate-hike cycles also prove the Fed has a
tightening bias, which turns psychology on the stock markets
bearish. So practically, Fed-rate-hike cycles simply shouldn’t be
bullish for stock markets.
But the hard
historical data didn’t bear this out, with the SPX rallying in the
majority of the Fed-rate-hike cycles, seeing bigger average gains in
those than losses in the others, and achieving that small overall
average gain. Given the fundamental impact of higher rates on stock
prices, this seemed odd. So we have to dig deeper into individual
Fed-rate-hike cycles, which paints a more coherent picture of what
to expect.
The stock markets
meander in great third-of-a-century cycles I call
Long Valuation
Waves. Each wave’s first half is a mighty secular bull lasting
about 17 years. These see investors flock to stocks and bid up
their prices far faster than underlying corporate earnings are
growing, ratcheting up their valuations. Eventually valuations grow
too excessive and greed peaks, which ushers in each wave’s second
half.
That’s a
symmetrical 17-year secular bear, in which stock prices simply
grind sideways on balance for long enough to let earnings catch
up with the preceding bull peak’s lofty stock prices. Secular
bears consist of an alternating series of cyclical bears and
bulls, which first cut stock prices in half and then double them
back up to breakeven again. These great valuation cycles explain
the SPX’s rate-hike-cycle behavior.
A 16.7-year
secular bull peaked back in February 1966, paving the way for a
16.5-year secular bear running to August 1982. This
sideways-grinding trend of stock prices consolidating for long
enough to enable profits to catch up and lower excessive valuations
was the key driving force behind the markets during the first 5
Fed-rate-hike cycles of the modern era. And they saw average SPX
losses of 5.5%.
If the stock
markets were relatively high in their secular-bear consolidation
trend when the Fed started to hike rates, they lost ground as
mid-secular-bear cyclical bulls rolled over into cyclical bears.
And since the Fed has always been worried about the stock-market
reaction to its rate hikes due to the impact of the wealth effect on
consumer spending and thus the overall economy, it never starts
hiking near major stock lows.
After that in the
17.6 years between August 1982 and March 2000, the stock markets
powered higher in their greatest secular bull on record. That
period encompassed the next 5 Fed-rate-hike cycles, which saw
average gains of 9.2%. The SPX rallied in 4 of those 5
secular-bull rate-hike cycles, compared to falling in 4 of the 5
secular-bear rate-hike cycles. This historical record is
very provocative and illuminating.
The stock markets’
position within the Long Valuation Waves when new Fed-rate-hike
cycles are born looks like the dominant driver of whether they rise
or fall during those cycles. Fed rate hikes are likely to be
ignored by stock markets powering higher in secular bulls, overcome
by traders’ popular greed. But during secular bears, Fed rate hikes
are overwhelmingly likely to help drive selling pushing stocks
lower.
So if
this newest Fed-rate-hike cycle is
happening in a secular bull, stock markets are likely to
shrug it off and keep on rallying on balance. But if the stock
markets are really in a secular bear, rising rates will almost
certainly force them lower. And unfortunately the fundamental and
technical evidence is heavily in favor of the stock markets still
being mired deep in the secular bear that started all the way
back in early 2000.
When that last
secular bull peaked, the stock markets were trading at extreme
valuations up around 43x earnings. That is far into bubble
territory above 28x, and the century-and-a-quarter average
trailing-twelve-month price-to-earnings ratio of the S&P 500 is
merely 14x. That’s fair value for stocks. After that
extreme, stocks started grinding sideways giving profits time to
grow into those lofty secular-bull-peak stock prices.
And indeed that’s
exactly what happened between early 2000 and late 2012. The stock
markets ground sideways on balance, first getting sliced in half in
cyclical bears before doubling back up to breakeven again in
cyclical bulls. Prevailing price-to-earnings ratios
gradually
normalized on balance, with underlying corporate profits rising
faster than stock prices. It was a textbook secular bear until
early 2013.
That’s when the
Fed ramped up its wildly-unprecedented open-ended QE3 to full steam,
and started brazenly jawboning the stock markets higher. So the SPX
soon broke above its decade-plus secular-bear resistance near 1500
and ultimately levitated over 2100 by May 2015. This led stock
investors to universally assume a new secular bull had been born,
but odds are it was merely a gross Fed-conjured distortion.
When adjusted for
basic CPI inflation, the S&P 500’s secular-bull peak of 1527 in
March 2000 works out to just over 2100 in constant May-2015
dollars! So in righteous
real
inflation-adjusted terms, the stock markets have still never
surmounted their last secular bull’s peak despite the extraordinary
levitation the Fed fomented in recent years. The stock markets are
still mired in that 17-year secular-bear sideways grind.
And with
prevailing
stock-market valuations just challenging 26x in recent months
which isn’t far from 28x bubble territory, there’s no way
this secular bear is over. Secular bears don’t end until the
general-stock-market P/E ratio is way down near 7x, half fair
value. Even in the dark heart of 2008’s stock panic and the
subsequent early-2009 ultimate nadir, the SPX’s P/E ratio never fell
much below 12x earnings.
And if the US
stock markets indeed remain stuck in their long secular bear which
the Fed temporarily tried to derail through the most aggressive easy-money policies in its entire century-long history, then this
new Fed-rate-hike cycle is very bearish for stocks.
There are high odds the stock markets will sell off on balance as
the Fed hikes rates, likely seriously given today’s
Fed-conjured near-bubble valuations.
And the coming
stock-market selloff that Fed rate hikes will accelerate will be
exacerbated by the gross distortions from ZIRP and QE in recent
years. ZIRP’s impact on the stock markets was enormous, so the
unwinding of ZIRP should largely reverse the SPX levitation. The
primary mechanism through which ZIRP boosted stock prices so
dramatically was through enormous levels of corporate stock
buybacks.
With the Fed
bullying short rates near zero through ZIRP, and long rates near
record lows thanks to QE, the costs for corporations to borrow vast
sums of money withered to all-time lows. So the majority of the
elite US companies decided to undertake financial engineering to
simultaneously boost their stock prices and earnings per share.
They literally borrowed way over a trillion dollars to buy
back their own stocks!
Over 3/4ths of the
elite SPX companies engaged in stock buybacks, which bid up stock
prices while also reducing the outstanding share count which
increases earnings per share.
This newest Fed-rate-hike cycle is going to start reversing these
record-low corporate borrowing rates artificially created by
ZIRP and QE. Even a modest uptick in prevailing rates will
drastically alter the economics of corporate stock buybacks.
So the negative
impact of the Fed hiking rates on buybacks financed with borrowed
money alone are incredibly bearish for stock prices. And stock
markets enjoyed a strong secondary boost in recent years from the
Fed’s extreme policies forcing bond yields near record lows. This
left investors seeking yields with no choice but to abandon
Fed-pummeled bonds to migrate capital into far-riskier
dividend-paying stocks.
With
this new Fed-rate-hike cycle ending
ZIRP and starting to allow bond yields to normalize again, all those
legions of investors looking for yields to provide them incomes are
going to start moving back into bonds. That will put even more
selling pressure on stock markets as the Fed raises rates. So the
selling stock markets will face as the Fed hikes rates out of
record-low extremes are vastly greater than in normal cycles.
With that
extraordinary stock-market levitation of recent years fueled by ZIRP
going to unwind as interest rates
slowly normalize,
investors need to be exceedingly careful. They need to exit the
overvalued stock markets and park that capital in cash or gold.
Holding cash while stock markets fall grants a proportional gain in
stock-share purchasing power after that selloff ends. Cash protects
and preserves capital in bear markets.
But as one of the
only assets that moves contrary to stock prices, gold grows
capital during stock bears. Gold rallies on balance as stock
markets sell off thanks to growing investment demand from investors
seeking prudent
portfolio diversification. Gold has
actually thrived
in past Fed-rate-hike cycles, enjoying exceptional average gains
an order of magnitude higher than stock markets! This can be
played two ways.
Investors can
simply buy physical gold bullion or the flagship GLD SPDR Gold
Shares gold ETF to mirror the coming gold upleg. But gold’s gains
can be greatly leveraged in the left-for-dead gold stocks,
which are still languishing near extreme
13-year secular lows. Their stock prices are at
fundamentally-absurd levels relative to their
existing profits,
which will quickly soar as gold inevitably mean reverts far higher.
Gold stocks are
likely to be the best-performing sector of 2016 by far, which
is why we’ve aggressively bought and recommended many elite gold and
silver stocks at Zeal in recent months. No other sector in all the
markets is as undervalued and loathed, leaving vast room for gold
stocks to soar as investors start to return. Buying in ahead of the
herd before rate hikes’ impacts become apparent will yield the
greatest gains.
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The bottom line is
Fed-rate-hike cycles’ impact on the stock markets has been
ambiguous, with the SPX seeing slightly-positive average gains.
Stock markets’ performance during rate-hike cycles depends on where
the markets happened to be in their long bull-bear cycles when the
Fed starts hiking rates. Rate-hike cycles happening in bull markets
see stocks tend to rise, and in bear markets see stocks tend to
fall.
And not only do
the stock markets remain mired deep in a secular bear today,
but this newest Fed-rate-hike cycle is
wildly unprecedented coming out of such record monetary-policy extremes.
There is a very high chance that the Fed’s entire artificial
stock-market levitation of recent years will be fully unwound as
interest rates normalize. So the stock downside risks in this
peculiar environment are far greater than normal.
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