23 April 2024

Stocks Could Ignore History Lesson

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When the Federal Reserve raised rates in 1994, the stock market endured little more than a glancing blow. When the rate cycle eventually turns this time around, investors may not be so lucky. With the job market looking stronger, economists have been moving up their estimates for when the Fed will begin raising its target range for overnight rates. In The Wall Street Journal's August economic forecasting survey, 75% of respondents said they expect the Fed to tighten by the first half of next year, up from 56.5% who thought so in May.

For anyone trying to gauge how rate increases might affect markets, 1994 offers a natural analog. Back then, investors had become accustomed to low rates—it had been five years since the Fed had tightened policy—and so were caught offsides when the central bank made its move. But while bonds got trounced, the damage to the stock market was short-lived. At its worst point, the S&P 500 was down all of 5.9% from the start of that year, but it finished out 1994 with a loss of just 1.5%. And with dividends reinvested, it posted a gain of 1.3%.

But an important consideration is how much lower interest rates are now, and how those low rates have led investors and companies to behave.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note at the start of 1994, at 5.8%, was about 3.2 percentage points above the rate of inflation. The current yield of 2.4% is just 0.3 percentage points higher than inflation. That creates a stark calculus for anybody trying to generate income in the bond market.

Some have converted into REITs or unloaded assets into master limited partnerships. Many have boosted cash returned to shareholders through dividends and buybacks. At nonfinancial companies, the past 12 months' dividends and net share repurchases came to 4.2% of market capitalization at the end of the first quarter, according to the Federal Reserve

If stocks are more bond-like than they were heading into 1994, the risk is that they will have a more bond-like reaction to rising rates, and fall. Adding to the risk, valuations may not be as supportive.

The S&P 500 now trades at about 17.3 times the past year's earnings, a little bit lower than the 18.3 price/earnings multiple it had heading into 1994. An important difference is that in 1994 profits accelerated, with S&P 500 earnings increasing by 18%. Such a gain seems unlikely now, when profit margins are at record highs and labor and equipment costs are primed to rise. Analysts expect S&P 500 earnings to grow by 12% next year, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

One reason investors have been willing to pay so much may be that they see low rates as a justification for receiving lower future cash flows on their stock purchases. But if rates increase, that justification gets swept away.

Click here to access the full article on The Wall Street Journal.

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