Fed-Defying Stock Rally Turns Most Of Wall Street To Bears

Generic market wraps published on Friday described an unremitting equity melt-up deaf to the shrill protestations of bubble-decrying skeptics. Trading beyond 5,000, the S&P was 800 points above the most bearish year-end 2024 Wall Street forecast as it stood headed into the new year. US shares would need to fall 16% to match JPMorgan's original 2024 target. Earlier this week, in an asset allocation update, the bank reiterated a defensive stance citing familiar concerns, including the lagged

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14 thoughts on “Fed-Defying Stock Rally Turns Most Of Wall Street To Bears

  1. The Fed has lost control. Again. How many times will they rescue markets b/n 2018 and 2025? Does anyone at the Fed pay any attention to work similar to what H presents here about market structure, vol lever, etc., etc.? Doesn’t appear so.

    This march up feels like early 2020. Back then, AAPL warned–and was ignored. No similar shot across the bow–yet. Maybe market snaps soon, maybe not; no idea. But I suspect the longer the march continues, the uglier the snap down. Fear not, it’s an election year so there’s good reason to keep pushing the envelope and trust in Fed to cover…and Yellen to demand Fed’s cooperation. Maybe.

    1. I think I should be clear, though: You can’t make investment decisions based on the whole “They never learn!” derision vis-à-vis the Fed and bubbles. At the end of the day, you want to participate in bubbles, at least as they inflate, not sit in cash and cry foul. Think about all the people (and there were a lot of them) who spent years insisting the S&P would revisit the March 2009 lows once the Fed’s monetary “experiments” inevitably backfired. How’d that turn out? Some of those same people are still around today, saying the same general thing, although they’ve given up on the GFC lows argument by now.

      1. Agree 100%. Thanks for the clarification. I don’t invest based on the undeveloped ideas expressed in my cryptic comments but some might misunderstand.

        Sadly, many people–perhaps more than those who don’t participate in the bubbles–overstay their welcome and get scalded. They often do so, based on my anecdotal experiences communicating w/ friends, overhearing conversations during runs up (like now), etc., b/c they buy into the surface level narrative (e.g., “AI is different and will play out over many years”). They hear that narrative from financial advisors whether via web pages or directly in conversation. I suspect the vast majority of people participating in moves higher and never considering an exit, and their “advisors,” rarely read work such as yours that takes a much deeper dive into market structures and their complexity (structurally and beyond).

        I suggest the Fed’s responsibility to maintain financial stability should include a longer-term perspective allowing short-term vol, price discovery, and greater uncertainty. In other words, target markets and vol explicitly and let momentum folks know it’s a two-way street. Mandelbrot, Hayek, and others might suggest that would make things worse; I don’t know. I don’t have the evidence to demonstrate it definitely, and am not sure anyone could, but it “feels” like markets have a greater tendency since the GFC for Minsky moments.

        Names included only for those who may be interested in reading about them. I honestly don’t care what Minsky or Mandelbrot said. About anything. I sound a little like you H but nowhere near as smart or knowledgeable–seriously.

        So…I feel sad for the people who get scalded. And I believe the Fed (and SEC) could do a better job protecting the “little” people from structural disruptions–or at least talking about them to help educate laypersons about structural and other risks. Interestingly, simply talking about such structural risks more frequently might lead some momentum players to tweak their models.

  2. To sum it up, the economy is not responding to higher rates as the street or Fed models predicted. Historicals no longer seem applicable. Humility rather than certainty is the best approach for investors and policymakers alike.

    1. Isn’t the economy not responding to higher interest rates because the rates aren’t high enough? Fiscal policy is throwing off money into the system. Corporations and families with housing refinanced when money was virtually free. The US economy is still booming because of some unique COVID policies and because interest rates aren’t the only factor that matters.

  3. Bloomberg FCI is mostly spreads (HY/UST, CP/bills, etc), rest is volatility and stocks. FF rate is high relative to recent history but credit/equity fear is low. Very interesting combination. Suppose inflation and economy behave and in a few months Fed cuts FF into already loose ultra-FCI. Who would like to be short then?

    1. The market is broadening out.

      Not necessarily in the sense that other sectors are beating tech or that the 493 are beating the 7. The relative performance game is still hard.

      Rather, in the sense that more and more industries and individual names, including many away from tech, have “up and to the right” charts with positive revisions. If you screen the S&P 1500 for momentum, absolute not relative, it’s increasingly abundant.

      To the extent the previously narrow market was a warning, that warning light has been turned off.

  4. I’m terrible at timing things (already sold my NVDA, oops!) and Mr H’s right that fighting (hopefully by doing nothing because shorting is a fast path to bankruptcy) an irrational rise is a fool’s errand.

    Mostly I read here and watch/learn because I do believe the underlying mechanisms are logical and are happening: high interest rates hit SVB and would have taken out more banks without the “free swapsies”, companies are going bankrupt (and VC’s under pressure), Commercial (and MultiFamily) Real Estate is slowly unwinding too.

    China did not dodge the demographic challenge nor their real estate bubble – albeit slowly (but very visibly despite China’s notoriously opaque and manipulated numbers). Maybe those investors found US equities but eventually all of the dominoes will fall…

    So the real game is trying to identify which trigger or catalyst finally pulls the rug out 😉

    1. Friday night report from NYC: the kids (Gen Z and young millennials) have disposable income and are hitting the restaurants and bars. They can’t afford housing, but that doesn’t seem to be a huge concern.

      Laissez le bon temps rouler.

NEWSROOM crewneck & prints