At
mid-December’s Federal Open Market Committee meeting, Fed officials
began discussing quantitative tightening. Effectively selling
previously-monetized bonds to unwind quantitative-easing money
printing, this revelation from the minutes rattled markets in early
January. But hawkish-jawboning talk is cheap, as the Fed’s last QT
campaign proved. It was prematurely abandoned after stock markets
threatened a bear.
The
minutes from the FOMC’s December 15th meeting were released three
weeks later like usual on January 5th. They chronicled an
uber-hawkish assembly, led by doubling the pace of slowing QE4’s
epic money printing. That turbo-taper was joined by Fed officials’
individual rate-hike outlooks tripling from two rate increases
across 2022 and 2023 to fully six! Such a stark tightening pivot
should’ve left no hawkish surprises.
But
the minutes still revealed a huge one, these Fed officials
overwhelmingly supported launching QT soon after the FOMC’s
initial rate hike in this next cycle. “Almost all participants
agreed that it would likely be appropriate to initiate balance sheet
runoff at some point after the first increase in the target range
for the federal funds rate.” Balance-sheet runoff means not
replacing QE-purchased bonds when they mature.
While this type of QT is milder than selling bonds outright to speed
up this essential monetary-destruction process, Fed officials
expected an earlier-and-faster runoff. “...participants judged that
the appropriate timing of balance sheet runoff would likely be
closer to that of policy rate liftoff than in the Committee’s
previous experience.” Traders are already pricing in a 100% chance
that initial hike happens in mid-March.
Those minutes continued, “Many participants judged that the
appropriate pace of balance sheet runoff would likely be faster than
it was during the previous normalization episode.” The Fed’s only
other QT experience began in Q4’17, starting at $10b monthly and
ramping by another $10b each quarter until it hit its
$50b-per-month terminal velocity in Q4’18. Traders took the Fed
at its hawkish word, slamming markets.
The
benchmark US S&P 500 stock index (SPX) plunged a sharp 1.9% into
close on those QT minutes. Gold dropped from $1,825 just before
their release to an $1,811 close, then got hammered another 1.2%
lower the next day. Bitcoin cratered then too, plummeting 6.1% on
close. So traders apparently believed the FOMC is really on the
verge of starting QT soon and running it hard. But history
argues the Fed will fold.
Hawkish jawboning
is the main weapon in central bankers’ tightening arsenal. It is
far easier to talk about raising rates and unwinding monetized bonds
than actually doing it! And nothing emboldens Fed officials to
threaten tightening more than record-high stock markets. When that
mid-December FOMC meeting was underway, the SPX was just a couple
points off its all-time-record close from a few trading days
earlier.
Lofty stock markets give Fed officials courage to start hiking rates
and selling monetized bonds. But as those very tightenings
increasingly weigh on stock prices, the FOMC’s policies are blamed.
So Fed officials soon capitulate under that intense pressure,
prematurely ending tightening cycles then often quickly resuming
easing. These abrupt turn-one-eights when markets call the Fed’s
bluff have shredded its credibility.
Major stock-market selloffs threatening bear-market territory down
20%+ risk spawning recessions due to the negative wealth
effect. The worse stock markets are faring, the worse Americans
feel whether they are investors or not. So they pull in their horns
on spending, which can cascade in a vicious circle. Lower demand
hits corporate earnings, forcing layoffs that further erode spending
slowing the overall economy.
Stock-market selloffs have pressured the FOMC into surrendering on
so many tightenings that traders coined the term “Fed Put” for these
capitulations. Once SPX drawdowns grow large enough, Fed officials
lose the stomach to keep tightening. So traders need to take both
hawkish jawboning and newly-underway tightening cycles with a grain
of salt. They almost never run as long as Fed officials imply up
front.
Case
in point is the FOMC’s last rate-hike cycle and only historical
attempt at quantitative tightening. Both were prematurely
abandoned after they hammered the SPX to the verge of
bear-market-dom. Like Fed officials are threatening now, the rate
hikes started before QT. That twelfth Fed-rate-hike cycle of this
modern era since 1971 was launched in December 2015 after 7.0 years
running a zero-interest-rate policy.
Every-other FOMC meeting is accompanied by a so-called dot plot, a
collation of individual Fed officials’ unofficial forecasts for
future federal-funds-rate levels. The latest December 2021 dot plot
is where this outlook tripled to six hikes through 2022 and 2023.
Back in December 2015 with the Fed’s first rate hike in 9.5 years,
that dot plot forecast four more hikes in 2016. But only one
happened, fully one year later.
The
FOMC put that hiking cycle on hold because the SPX dropped 10.5% in
just 1.9 months following that maiden rate increase. Fed officials
didn’t resume that tightening until December 2016 after a long
series of new all-time-record closes in that benchmark stock index.
That ushered in the 2017-to-2019 span rendered in this chart, which
traders today must remember when evaluating the FOMC’s credibility.
The
S&P 500 is superimposed over the total assets on the Fed’s balance
sheet, revealing the only other quantitative-tightening episode in
history. Individual FFR hikes and cuts are noted, as are changes in
the pace of both QT bond selling and quantitative-easing bond
monetizations. The Fed Put is very real, top Fed officials cave
soon after tightening cycles fuel major stock selloffs. This next
one won’t prove any different.
 
The
SPX’s parade of record closes resumed with a vengeance in November
2016 after Trump’s surprise election victory. That Republican sweep
included control of the Senate and House, leaving traders ecstatic
on the high likelihood of big tax cuts coming soon. That
incredible taxphoria catapulted the stock markets almost straight
higher in 2017, making it easy for the FOMC to resume hiking and
finally launch QT.
The
FOMC hiked a third time in mid-March that year, followed by a fourth
in mid-June. Back then only every-other FOMC meeting was followed
by the chair’s press conferences, so that’s when policy changes were
mostly done. If the stock markets tanked on the 2:00pm FOMC
statements, the Fed chair could wax dovish at the 2:30pm press
conferences to moderate that impact. So rate hikes were on a
quarterly cadence.
The
FOMC took a break from hiking at its September 2017 meeting to
launch quantitative tightening to start shrinking the Fed’s bloated
balance sheet. Starting with October 2008’s brutal stock panic,
QE1, QE2, and QE3 bond monetizations had ballooned the Fed’s assets
by $3,625b over 6.7 years! They had peaked way back in January
2015, but never contracted more than 1.5% before that
September 2017 meeting.
Since QT had never before been tried to unwind QE, Fed officials
were worried about how markets would take it. So they decided to
gradually phase in QT mechanically, starting at a trivial
$10b-per-month pace in Q4’17. That would slowly ratchet up an
additional $10b monthly each quarter until reaching its terminal
pace in Q4’18. Even after hitting that $50b a month, just unwinding
half of that QE would take 30 more months!
I
wrote a popular essay that very week arguing that Fed QT was this
stock bull’s
death knell. An SPX that had been directly-QE-levitated for
years couldn’t persist when those big monetary inflows reversed hard
into outflows. But with QT starting small and traders infatuated by
the still-nearing huge Republican tax cuts, the SPX initially kept
blasting higher. That big tax-cut bill finally passed Congress in
late December 2017.
With
the stock markets powering to an endless series of new record
closes, it was easy for the FOMC to hike a fifth time in
mid-December 2017. Fed officials didn’t even talk about QT, which
was on autopilot ratcheting up at quarter-ends. That taxphoria
stock-market surge ultimately peaked in late January 2018, followed
by a blitzkrieg 10.2% SPX plunge. But luckily for the FOMC, the SPX
bounced into its next meeting.
So
Fed officials hiked their FFR for the sixth time in that cycle in
late March, which was soon followed by the quarter-end automatic QT
increase to $30b per month. Interestingly a neutral dot plot coming
with that rate-hiking FOMC meeting helped turn the stock markets
around. Traders feared Fed officials would forecast four total
hikes in 2018, but their collective outlook remained at three which
was considered dovish.
At
the FOMC’s next live meeting followed by a press conference in
mid-June, the seventh hike was executed. That was expected, but the
dots shifted back to hawkish forecasting four hikes that year. That
hawkish surprise fueled a sharp-but-short SPX pullback. As QT
continued mechanically ramping up to $40b per month of effective
monetized-bond sales, the SPX resumed powering to more new
all-time-record highs.
The
FOMC hiked an eighth time at its late-September meeting, and the dot
plot stayed stable predicting four hikes that year along with three
more in 2019. As planned, quantitative tightening accelerated to
its terminal velocity of $50b per month entering Q4’18.
After a year of Fed officials rarely mentioning QT and traders
largely ignoring it, the latter finally started worrying about
balance-sheet shrinkage’s impact on stocks.
Interestingly the fairly-new Fed chair Jerome Powell ignited that
quarter’s first SPX plunge. He had just assumed that position in
early February, and wasn’t worried about what he said with
stock-market record highs. At a speech he flipped on the hawkish
afterburners, saying after eight hikes the FFR was still easy.
He declared hiking could continue past the neutral point, which he
warned was still “a long way” away!
With
$50b per month of QE liquidity being withdrawn and the Fed chair
himself arguing for even more rate hikes, the SPX fell 12.7% between
the FOMC’s late-September and mid-December meetings. About a
quarter of that total drop happened in the couple weeks before that
latter FOMC decision. Much to Fed officials’ credit, they didn’t
cave that time with the SPX in correction territory. The ninth hike
was still done.
With
the SPX down hard, traders still expected Fed officials to throw
them a bone in the dots. Those did moderate, with three more hikes
implied instead of the four from the previous dot plot a quarter
earlier. But traders were looking for three hikes to be cut from
2019 instead of just one. Powell tried to calm them with a dovish
press conference, but when asked about $50b-per-month QT he said it
was “on automatic pilot”.
That
unleashed a temper tantrum of furious selling, ultimately hammering
the SPX another 7.7% lower in just four trading days! That extended
its total selloff to 19.8% in just 3.1 months, just a hair away from
the 20%+ new-bear threshold. Stock traders had finally slammed
through enough heavy selling to trigger that infamous Fed Put.
The political pressure on the FOMC soared as Trump’s Treasury
secretary attacked the Fed.
After plummeting to super-oversold levels, the SPX bounced hard into
early 2019. That rally stalled out before late January’s FOMC
meeting, where the Fed released an entirely separate statement on
QT. It declared the FOMC was “prepared to adjust any of the details
for completing balance sheet normalization in light of economic and
financial developments.” The Fed capitulated on QT, it was
no longer automatic!
The
SPX kept rocketing higher on that $50b-per-month terminal-velocity
QT being thrust on the chopping block. Then the FOMC totally
surrendered on both rate hikes and QT at its next meeting in
late March. Not only did the Fed not hike, but Fed officials’
dot-plot FFR outlook was slashed to zero hikes in 2019. Even more
remarkably, the FOMC declared QT would be quickly tapered to be
fully-eliminated by that September!
That
was ridiculously-premature, a stunning show of cowardice. That
would cap QT at just $825b, which would only unwind 22.8% of that
enormous $3,625b of Fed QE over 6.7 years. When QT was originally
announced just 18 months earlier, Wall Street Fed whisperers with
inside tracks on Fed officials’ thinking were forecasting a
half-unwind of QE1, QE2, and QE3. Instead QT would end up being
well under a quarter.
Realize the Fed’s last rate-hike cycle, as well as its first-ever
quantitative-tightening campaign, were torpedoed by a mere 20%ish
drop in the US stock markets! Such baby-bear declines aren’t
even big, as real bears tend to maul stock prices in half. The SPX
collapsed 49.1% in 2.6 years into October 2002, and 56.8% over 1.4
years into March 2009. Fed officials are utterly terrified of being
blamed for stock bears.
Maybe they genuinely fear negative-wealth-effect-driven recessions
or depressions. Maybe they hate the political firestorm Fed
tightenings generate when the SPX is plunging. Maybe they know the
next bear will be far worse than normal, after years of their QE
artificially levitating stock markets. Maybe they fear their own
stock portfolios being cut in half. Whatever the reasons, these
guys will not tolerate stock bears.
And
it’s not enough to just prematurely halt rate hikes and
balance-sheet runoffs. After Fed tightenings drive near-bear SPX
selloffs, the FOMC lurches the other way towards extreme easing.
When the SPX started rolling over again in mid-2019, Powell started
talking rate cuts. Then even though the FOMC only had room to cut
nine times before returning to zero, it squandered three of those in
the second half of that year.
Those came in late July, mid-September, and late October when the
S&P 500 remained at or near all-time-record highs! Three cuts in
three months with no justification whatsoever. But the real
kicker was the FOMC radically capitulating and launching QE4 in
mid-October between FOMC meetings! Even after QT was prematurely
abandoned, QE4 was declared at $60b per month with the SPX near
record highs.
Yes
there were dislocations in the repurchase-agreement markets then,
but the Fed had already rushed in to rescue them with temporary
emergency repo ops. There was no need to reverse rate hikes with
unnecessary cuts, and no reason to quickly reverse that little QT
progress with massive new QE. Make no mistake, Fed officials fold
like cheap suitcases when their tightenings drive near-bear
stock-market selloffs!
Their threatened new rate-hike cycle and new quantitative-tightening
campaign looming this year won’t prove any different. These guys
will talk tough when stock markets remain near record highs so
traders don’t care. Their hawkish jawboning will sound bold and
aggressive. The FOMC will even start hiking and maybe even dabble
in QT as long as stock markets cooperate. But sooner or
later the SPX will roll over.
Fed
officials will feign nonchalance as that Fed-tightening-driven
selloff crosses 5% and even 10%. They will declare the US economy
strong, and normalization through higher rates and monetized-bond
runoffs healthy. But as the SPX knifes below 15% and approaches
that 20% new-bear threshold, these guys will be sweating bullets.
They will again fall all over themselves Fed Putting, stopping
tightening to restart easing.
And
the stock-market risks are way higher this time around than that
last time. Heading into December 2015 when the FOMC launched that
last rate-hike cycle, the elite SPX stocks averaged
trailing-twelve-month price-to-earnings ratios of 25.8x. Going into
September 2017 when QT was birthed, that climbed to 28.1x.
Expensive stock markets were only just hitting dangerous bubble
territory starting at 28x earnings.
Remember QE1, QE2, and QE3 totaled $3,625b over 6.7 years. QE4,
which was supercharged to crazy extremes after March 2020’s
pandemic-lockdown stock panic, is currently up to $4,709b over just
1.9 years! It still has a little to grow yet before its tapering is
finished in March. That radically-unprecedented deluge of epic Fed
money printing left the elite SPX stocks trading at average TTM
P/Es of 33.6x entering January!
It
is certainly no coincidence the S&P 500’s massive 114.4% gain at
best since that latest stock panic is nearly identical to the Fed
balance sheet’s 113.2% mushrooming in that same span! These
stock-market levels are totally-fake, QE4-levitated. So if
the FOMC actually finds the courage to ramp this next QT to
significant levels, these stock markets are in for a world of hurt.
The SPX could plunge 20%ish within months!
So
all Fed officials’ hawkish jawboning in the last few months is just
cheap talk. Action is all that matters, and the FOMC has a
long sorry track record of fully surrendering tightenings when stock
markets fall far enough to trigger that Fed Put. 2022’s threatened
rate-hike cycle and QT balance-sheet runoff won’t last any longer
than stock markets cooperate. So traders shouldn’t fear these
likely-short-lived tightenings.
Gold-futures speculators in particular are paranoid about Fed rate
hikes, which is supremely-irrational. Fed tightenings force stock
markets lower, boosting gold investment demand. During the twelve
Fed-rate-hike cycles since 1971 including that last one, gold
averaged 26.1% absolute gains during their exact spans. In the
seven where gold rallied, its average gains were 54.7%! In the
other five it averaged 13.9% losses.
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The
bottom line is the Fed caved on its last quantitative-tightening
attempt, abandoning it years early. Once that tightening forced
stock markets to the verge of a new bear, the FOMC lost all courage
to keep normalizing. The Fed reversed course abruptly to aggressive
new easings. Fed officials talk a big game when stock markets are
high, hawkishly jawboning away. But their threatened actions never
live up to that.
With
the SPX near record highs in recent months, Fed officials are boldly
proclaiming an imminent rate-hike cycle and new QT. While the FOMC
will start those tightenings, they will only last while stock
markets cooperate. That likely won’t be long with valuations forced
deep into dangerous bubble territory by the Fed’s epic QE4 money
printing. These coming tightenings will be quickly abandoned when
stocks plunge. |