Report
Olivier Desbarres
EUR 84.19 For Business Accounts Only

Fed hikes not immune from equity collapse

The Fed is widely expected to hike its policy rate 25bp to 0.25-0.50% (its first since December 2018) at its meeting on , by which point it is due to have ended its asset purchases. Some FOMC members will likely push for a larger 50bp hike.

Markets, as of 4th February, were pricing in a total of 120bp hikes in 2022, up from 117bp as of 28th January. In line with our forecast 2-year US Treasury yields have risen to their high since January 2020, albeit with regular and sometimes sizeable pull-backs.

US macro indicators, including ISM PMI figures, suggest that US economic growth slowed in January. However, the labour market remained strong and core PCE inflation rose to 4.9% yoy in December or more than twice the Fed’s long-term target of 2%.

While cost-push pressures, including  rising energy prices, supply-side shortages and bottlenecks and higher freight prices, have clearly contributed to higher PCE-inflation, so have demand-pull pressures, with personal expenditure back on trend since Q4 2021. This is not the case in the United Kingdom, in our view, and Bank of England policy rate hikes (50bp so far in this cycle) will do more harm than good to the UK economy.

The S&P 500’s sell-off in January and 2.4% fall on 3rd February give food for thought as to whether successive Fed hikes will eventually collapse US equities and the implications for the Dollar. The S&P 500 and Dollar NEER were inversely correlated in the first 15 months of the pandemic but have since mid-June 2021 trended in the same direction.

The other question is how the Fed would react should US equities rapidly trend lower. Our analysis shows a strong, positive historical correlation between disposable income, US consumer confidence, households’ net-worth (including equity holdings), and personal consumption expenditure. Moreover, the past three Fed hiking cycles (1999-2000, 2004-2006 and 2016-2018) were all associated with robust US equities.  

Of course “this time is different”, with the Fed’s real policy rate at a record-low. However, we think the direction of US equities, and their impact on consumption and ultimately inflation, will colour the timing and magnitude of Fed rate hikes and the management of its balance sheet. Just don’t expect the Fed to admit as much.

Provider
4x Global Research
4x Global Research

4X Global Research is a London-based consultancy providing institutional and corporate clients with focused, actionable, independent and connected research on Emerging and G20 fixed income and FX markets and economies.

4X Global Research has a strong forecasting track record, rooted in both a qualitative and quantitative analysis of data, trends, policy decisions and global events. Its conflict-free and unbundled research services aim to give investors a unique edge in their investment decisions. Its exclusive subscription-based reports and consultancy services form the basis of a long-term strategic partnership with its clients.

Analysts
Olivier Desbarres

Olivier Desbarres has 23 years experience working in finance, including 15 years as a senior Economist, Rates and FX strategist for Credit Suisse and Barclays in Moscow, London and Singapore. In his latest role he was Head of Asia-Pacific FX Strategy at Barclays in Singapore and the focal point for G10 research. He is fluent in French and has Economics degrees from Cambridge University and the London School of Economics.

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