By Jeffrey
Cane | Monday, December 13
Central Bank
Week. Given
the large presence the world's central banks have had in markets since the
financial crisis, it's not surprising that investors might feel nervous coming
into this week. Some 20 central banks are meeting the next few days, just
as questions about inflation and the Omicron variant are looming ominously.
The most important central bank meeting, of
course, is the two-day meeting of Federal
Reserve policy
makers that gets under way tomorrow. In the face of a tenacious rise in prices,
the Fed is expected to indicate on Wednesday that it will speed up the winding
down of its bond-buying, which would set the stage for interest rate increases
to come earlier. As Randall
Forsyth pointed
out in Up & Down Wall Street this weekend in Barron's, "While
widely anticipated, this shift is seen leading to widely divergent outcomes by
seasoned analysts and investors."
According to the CME
FedWatch Tool, the probability of at least one interest rate
increase by the May 4 Federal Open
Market Committee meeting is now at 54%. Three increases by the
end of next year are the most popular scenario.
Amid the uncertainty about Fed outcomes,
investors chose to be cautious today, and stocks fell, ending the
session at their lowest levels. The S&P 500 closed down 0.9% after a record close on
Friday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average also declined 0.9%.
Tech stocks were among the losers, and the Nasdaq
Composite ended off 1.4%. The NYSE
Fang+ Index fell 2.7%. Tesla tumbled 5%. Apple closed down 2.1%, to $175.74, even after
J.P. Morgan raised its 2022 price target on the stock to $210, a
Wall Street high. Apple needs to close above $182.856 to reach $3 trillion in
market capitalization.
Energy stocks were weaker as crude
oil futures
slipped 0.5%, to $71.29 a barrel. Both APA (formerly Apache) and Marathon
Oil fell
more than 5%. The SPDR S&P
Oil & Gas Exploration & Production exchange-traded fund lost 4.5%
The risk-off sentiment was evident in the
Treasury market, where prices rose. The yield on the 10-year
Treasury note declined to 1.423% from 1.487% on Friday.
More defensive equity sectors also did well
today: the Utilities Select Sector SPDR ETF (up 1.2%) and the Vanguard
Consumer Staples Index ETF (up 1.1%).
Bitcoin slumped, trading at $46,892 this afternoon. It
is now down about 31% from highs reached just in November.
Gold was slightly higher, at $1786.30 an ounce.
While investors may fear the punch bowl being
taken away next year, Jonathan Golub, chief U.S.
equity strategist at Credit Suisse, reminds us the
arrival of rate increases is not necessarily a bad precursor for stocks. He
wrote today:
History shows that stock returns remain robust in the months leading up to and following the first rate increase. Over the past four cycles (’94, ’99, ’04, ’15), the S&P 500 gained 9.5% in the 12 months prior to the first hike, and 26.0% over the subsequent three years. The real damage from higher rates tends to occur later in the cycle when tighter policy flattens/inverts the curve. We are far from that point.
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