Market Review Q224: The Fed’s Kaput

Stocks continued to run in the second quarter with the S&P 500 posting a total return of 4.28% for the second quarter and 15.29% for the first half. After a bit of weakness early in the quarter, it took only a few weeks for stocks to resume their winning ways. Once again, big tech, artificial intelligence, and momentum were leading themes.

Another leading theme was the Fed "put", the practice of monetary authorities easing financial conditions when markets become turbulent, or even just stagnant. As concerns about growth have been increasing, so too have expectations of market-friendly rate cuts from the Fed also been increasing. The result is, there is almost never an environment that is bad for stocks.

Long live the Fed put

To be sure, there are valid reasons for believing in the Fed's support of the market. For starters, there is history. Since the late 1990s, and arguably going back even further, the Fed has made a practice of easing financial conditions whenever turbulence arose. Financial stability has been a priority, and it remains a priority.

In addition, the Fed has a more expansive toolkit today than it ever has to deal with a wide variety of financial miscues. The GFC featured Quantitative Easing (QE) which was amped up during the Covid lockdowns. The Fed also made the Standing Repo Facility (SRF) permanent, added the Bank Term Funding Program (BTFP) during the banking crisis in early 2023, and has been working to improve the effectiveness of the Discount Window. All of these serve as important backstops for financial plumbing as well as safety nets for financial markets.

Finally, the Fed also recently decided to substantially scale back its Quantitative Tightening (QT) program. After committing to reduce its obscenely bloated balance sheet (from QE) and return to some kind of monetary normalcy, it lost its heart for discipline and caved in. As a result, it is easy to assume the Fed is already on a trajectory of easing again. Rate cuts are just the next logical step.

What has made the Fed put especially potent, however, is the belief system that the Fed not only CAN operate to protect financial markets, but also that it WILL always succeed in boosting them. Some time after the GFC, the Fed put morphed from being a safety net against disruptive dislocations into a guarantee of strong returns. As a result, investors have become habituated to increasingly aggressive intervention. This creates a self-fulfilling prophecy that works as long as investors believe it works. We'll come back to this.