Fed Injects Rate Cut Adrenaline

There were a lot of injections, of the COVID vaccine variety, four years ago, but now the Federal Reserve is injecting some financial adrenaline through stimulative interest rate cuts. Expectations are for seven more -0.25% cuts over the next 12 months, but this cycle started two weeks ago when the FOMC (Federal Open Market Committee) initiated a larger -0.50% reduction in the benchmark federal funds rate target (see chart below). For now, investors have enjoyed the boost of adrenaline, which should help lower consumer interest rates on things like home mortgages, credit cards, and car loans.

Source: Yardeni.com


For the month, the S&P 500 climbed +2.0%, the Dow Jones Industrial +1.9%, and the NASDAQ index +2.7%. The monthly gains are adding to a 2024 that is shaping up to be a potentially banner year. With one quarter left in the year, the S&P has catapulted +21% higher, the Dow Jones Industrial Average +12%, and the NASDAQ index +21% for the first nine months.


Economy Strong, So Why Cut Now?

Before the Fed’s last action a couple weeks ago, the last Fed rate cut occurred in 2020 (a -1.50% cut) in the midst of a global pandemic with the aim of boosting financial activity while the brick-and-mortar economy had effectively been shut down. But compared to today, the economy is performing much better. Second quarter GDP growth came in at +3.0% with 3rd quarter GDP growth forecasts coming in at +3.1%.

So, if things look so great, why would the Fed be cutting rates to stimulate the economy now? In short, inflation has been coming down (see chart below) from a peak of 9.1% a couple years ago to 2.5% last month (near the Fed’s long-term 2.0% target). And although the current unemployment rate is low at 4.2%, it has nevertheless weakened and climbed substantially from a 3.4% level last year).

Source: Trading Economics


China Chugs Higher

While the U.S. economy has been leading developed countries during the post-COVID recovery period, China’s financial system has been struggling due to a collapsing real estate market and deteriorating consumer spending. As a result, the Chinese stock market has been drastically underperforming other foreign markets, until Beijing just recently announced a number of stimulus initiatives last week in hopes of buoying economic growth closer to its 5% target.

Here are some of the Chinese government measures: 

  • China plans to issue 2 trillion yuan in special sovereign bonds
  • China’s central bank cut its reserve requirement ratio by 50 basis points
  • Fiscal policies to focus on increasing consumer subsidies and controlling government debt
  • Shanghai, Shenzhen plan to lift key home purchase restrictions

Investors cheered the announcements by binge-buying Chinese stocks, as you can see from the CSI 300 China index, which rocketed +21% higher last month – the largest monthly gain since 2008. 


AI Revolution Continues

While economic headwinds and tailwinds continue to swirl, the AI (Artificial Intelligence) revolution has persisted in the background. While some traders have solely focused on AI juggernaut NVIDIA Corp. (NVDA), which has steamrolled its way into becoming a three trillion-dollar valued company, there are other tech titan companies like Oracle Corp. (ORCL), which are also riding the AI wave. Just last month, Oracle’s billionaire founder, Larry Ellison, stated, “We have 162 data centers now. I expect we will have 1,000 or 2,000 or more data centers…around the world.” Each large-scaled data center can cost in the hundreds of millions or multi-billion-dollar range. With hundreds of billions (if not trillions) of dollars to be spent on the multi-year AI infrastructure buildout, as you can imagine, there is a large, diverse ecosystem of other companies that stand to benefit.


Flies in the Ointment

By simply judging the performance of the U.S. stock market, one might think there is nothing for investors to worry about. But as is always the case, there still remain some flies in the ointment. With a tight, hotly-contested presidential election just one month away, coupled with escalated wars in the Mideast and Ukraine, future volatility or a correction in the stock market should come as no surprise to anyone, especially in light of the rich gains already registered this year. Another concern is the risk of rising inflation, which could rear its ugly head again if the Federal Reserve misjudges its rate-cutting program and overheats the economy.

Normally, interest rate cuts are reserved by the Fed for periods when the economy is headed towards a recession or there are major systemic disruptions in the financial system, which affect market liquidity and/or bank lending. That’s not the case today. Thanks to declining inflation and a robust but weakening job market, the Fed has been equipped to provide investors with a healthy injection of adrenaline through an early round of interest rate cuts, which has contributed to the powerful stock market gains. So far, the adrenaline is doing its job.


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