Capital Markets Outlook 4Q 2024—Normalization: Endgame

What You Need to Know

Normalization seems to be in its final stage, with the Fed expected to continue cutting rates. In equity markets, compelling valuations and attractive growth prospects should be the watchwords. In the bond world, yields remain high, with potential in high-yield credit and other segments.

Key Takeaways

  • The journey to economic normalization is winding down, with the Fed suggesting seven policy-rate cuts on the way that will extend through 2025.
  • In equity markets, growth expectations have come down for the Magnificent Seven mega-cap tech stocks, leaving relative potential in other areas of the market…the “Magnificent Others.”
  • The third quarter started a new chapter for bonds, with falling rates likely to create a favorable tailwind. We think investors should consider taking advantage of still-attractive yields.
  • In municipal bonds, accelerating demand is helping offset record new issuance volume. We see a sizable opportunity for investors to move off the sidelines and into the market.

The Endgame for the Long Process of Normalization

As the journey to economic normalization nears its end, markets have rallied. Year-to-date equity performance has been the strongest since the late 1990s, and bonds rode falling US Treasury yields. Rates are still at the core of asset returns—driven by economic growth, inflation and labor markets.

The Fed’s worries about the first two have waned, so we expect jobs to be the primary focus. In gauging future policy moves, the Fed will closely monitor signals such as declining hiring rates and layoffs that remain low and stable. Strong labor markets translate into a healthy environment for consumers, which we see in robust take-home pay and retail sales that stand at pre-pandemic levels.

Collectively, this picture has enabled the Fed to cut policy rates by 50 basis points so far this year. The Fed suggests seven cuts ahead—one each adjacent to the next two Federal Open Market Committee meetings and then a cut every other meeting in 2025. While the market initially runs ahead of the Fed, both markets and the central bank envision a terminal interest rate of around 3% (Display).

The Fed’s Interest Rate View Versus the Market’s View