Wednesday, April 5, 2023

Monday, April 3, 2023

Fed Funds Rate and Equities: What's the Lag?

The Fed Funds Rate peaked at 7.03% in 2000.  The target rate was 6.5% in 2000, and was first dropped on January 3, 2001 to 6%.  It eventually bottomed at 1% on June 24, 2003.

This was the so-called tech bubble, so I'm tracking the NASDAQ.

The NASDAQ peaked at 5049 on March 10, 2000 and declined 78% to 1114 on October 9, 2002.


The Fed Funds Rate peaked at 5.41% in 2007.  The target rate was 5.25% until August 7, 2007.  The Fed dropped it to 4.75% on September 18, 2007.  It eventually bottomed at 0% on December 15, 2008.

This was the Great Financial Crisis, so I'm using the S & P 500 Index.

The S & P 500 peaked at 1565 on October 9, 2007 and declined 57% to 677 on March 9, 2009.


The takeaway message?  The Fed was late in dropping the targeted Fed Funds Rate, finally acting on January 3, 2001, a lag of 10 months after the NASDAQ peaked in March, 2000.  And the NASDAQ continued to plummet even as the FFR continued to decline.  In fact, the bottom in the NASDAQ tech bubble didn't occur until October, 2002, some 21 months after the Fed initially dropped the FFR.


With the Great Financial Crisis, the Fed acted more quickly, initially dropping the FFR in September, 2007. a month before the S & P 500 started cratering in October, 2007.  However, the Fed's aggressive easing did not prevent the S & P 500 from declining 57% to its March, 2009 bottom, thanks to the bank bailouts (TAFP, TALF, P-PIP, etc.).


In 2023, despite bank runs and another brewing financial crisis, the Fed continues to raise its targeted FFR.  When they finally do pivot and drop the FFR, it will probably be too little and too late.  Based on the two most recent cycles (and this one should be worse as debt loads and the insolvent Fed's balance sheet is more leveraged than ever), we can expect equities to face severe headwinds for the next 12 to 24 months, post-FFR finally declining (probably this summer).  The silver lining in all this is the S & P 500 peaked on December 29, 2021 at 4793, so we are off our all-time highs (currently 4109 at the time of this writing).  The key question then becomes is the bottom in?  Will bank runs be ring-fenced and contagion avoided?  And how much liquidity will be needed to prevent contagion of counterparty risks?  Monetary authorities have hinted at between $2 trillion and $18 trillion.

A side effect will be inflation as the Fed and US Treasury will provide trillions in liquidity and credit in an attempt to cushion collapsing financial markets if they do indeed collapse, with the latest vehicle dubbed the BTFP.  https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/bank-term-funding-program.htm

Foreign financial institutions will also be feeding at the trough in the form of currency swaps.

But don't worry, it's not "QE", so all is well.  /sarcasm


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