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Thursday, March 28, 2024

Fed Signals Taper. Will It Be Different This Time?

Courtesy of ZeroHedge View original post here.

Authored by Lance Roberts via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,

Market Fails At Highs As Fed Spooks Markets

Last week, we reviewed our “buy signals” and the advance over the past month. As we concluded:

“While the market did hit all-time highs this week, it was a feeble rally. Such is not a sign of confidence the ‘highs’ will stick.”

Well, not only did the highs not stick, but the 50-dma failed during Friday’s sell-off. The market closing at its lows suggests we could see some more selling early next week. The “good news,” if you want to call it that, is that the “sell signal” is moving quickly through its cycle. Such suggests that selling pressure may remain limited and may resolve itself by the end of June.

The “not-so-good” news is on the weekly chart. Our previous discussions warned that if the daily and weekly “sell signals” align, such has often coincided with more “corrective” rather than “consolidative” actions. Importantly, weekly signals are only valid at the close of the week. On Friday, the weekly “sell signal” triggered suggests a period of correction/consolidation is probable.

As we noted several times over the last few weeks, we set our expectations for a 5-10% correction between mid-June and July. With both signals triggered, we reduced our equity exposure and raised cash levels further. 

Let me reiterate what we said last week:

“For now, the bullish trend remains intact. Therefore, there is no need to get overly defensive at this juncture. However, being excessively complacent and not applying some risk management to portfolios will leave you flat-footed when the correction does come.

There are plenty of warnings that suggest ‘carrying an umbrella’ may come in handy.

This past week, the Fed’s perceived change in policy stance allowed those with an “umbrella” to weather the sudden storm.

Will It Be Different This Time

Both Michael Lebowitz and I recently discussed the Fed starting to “think about thinking about tapering.” This week’s Fed meeting was a clear indication such was in play and will likely get announced at the annual Jackson Hole “confab” of Central Bankers.

As noted following the latest FOMC meeting, the Fed kept the benchmark rate and the pace of bond-buying unchanged at $120 Billion per month. However, the most significant shift was the more hawkish tilt to its rate forecasts. As shown below, courtesy of Zerohedge, the median projections now show 2-rate hikes by end-2023. Notably, 7 of the FOMC members see a rate hike in 2022.

Chart courtesy of Zerohedge

“For those confused by the Rorschach above, the 2023 median dot was a lot higher; in fact, only five members had rates unchanged up from 11 in March. The median is now 0.625% higher than anyone was reasonably expecting! That said, the sheer dispersion of dots in 2023 suggests the Fed doesn’t really know what the outlook looks like. Rather, the ‘median of 2 hikes’ in 2023 a byproduct of a lot of different views (on hawkish/dovish side). Such is not a clear message to the markets, and can easily change as soon as there is a deflationary whiff in the economy.” – Zerohedge

There are two essential things to take away from that analysis.

  1. The announcement is very positive for the dollar and sets up the Fed to announce the beginning of the “taper” of the bond-buying programs; and,

  2. “This time is not different” as the taper and eventual rate hikes are bond positive and stock negative.

Taper Starts The Clock

Despite comments to the contrary, the correlation between the Fed’s balance sheet and the S&P 500 is evident. Whether the correlation is due to liquidity moving into assets through leverage or just the “psychology” of the “Fed Put,” the result is the same.

Therefore, it should also not be surprising that when the Fed starts “tapering” their bond purchases, the market tends to witness increased volatility. The grey shaded bars in the chart below show when the balance sheet is either flat or contracting.

The risk of a market correction rises further when the Fed is both tapering its balance sheet and increasing the overnight lending rate. The negative impact of tighter monetary policy on asset prices is of no surprise.

What we now know, after more than a decade of experience, is that when the Fed starts to slow or drain its monetary liquidity, the clock starts ticking to the next corrective cycle.

Inflation Is Surging But Will It Last

With the latest reports on prices, the inflation surge has become overwhelmingly visible. However, as discussed previously, the question we must answer is whether it will last?

This past week, we saw both the CPI and PPI reports come in both now above their long-term trends. However, it is the annual rate of change with which we are most concerned. As shown below, the current spread between PPI and CPI hit another record.

Please pay attention to this spread as it shows producers cannot pass along inflation to their customers. Therefore, the retained inflation, and by this measure, a lot of it, will erode profit margins and earnings in the future.

Import and export prices also show a strong surge relative to GDP growth. While increased export prices are good for exporters (~40% of corporate profits,) increased import costs impede consumption and domestic production. As such, it is not uncommon to see weaker economic growth following such episodes.

It is also worth noting that “wages” for the bottom 80% of workers continue to weaken despite the “strong” recovery. Such will make it very difficult for consumers to absorb higher costs and continue to consume at current levels.

The Coming Dollar Rally

“Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon in the sense that it is and can be produced only by a more rapid increase in the quantity of money than in output.” – Milton Friedman

Currently, there is no argument money supply has exploded without a corresponding increase in economic output. If there were, bank loans and monetary velocity would be on the rise. Unfortunately, such isn’t the case currently.

Furthermore, the weakness of the U.S. dollar contributes to the inflationary push in the economy as it increases the costs of imported goods.

However, these forces are why the current “inflationary surge” will become deflationary by the end of the year. Moreover, as noted above, this deflationary surge combined with the “Fed taper” is “dollar positive.” 

Currently, wages are lagging higher costs amid a weaker dollar (purchasing power). Furthermore, as the previous stimulus leaves the system, purchasing power will fade. As such occurs, economic growth, import prices, and inflation will decline as the dollar tends to strengthen.

Of course, history already shows such is what will happen.

There have been ZERO times in history when the Fed started a rate hiking campaign that did not lead to a negative outcome.

We suggest this time won’t be any different.

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