Don’t Fight The Fed

 | Jan 14, 2022 05:26AM ET

'Don’t Fight The Fed.' Unfortunately, that mantra has remained a 'call to arms' of the financial markets and media 'bullish tribes' over the last decade.

Armed with zero interest rate policy and the most aggressive monetary campaign in history, investors elevated the financial markets to heights only rarely seen in human history. Yet, despite record valuations, pandemics, warnings, and inflationary pressures, the 'animal spirit' fostered by an undeniable 'faith in the Federal Reserve' remain alive and well.

Of course, the rise in 'animal spirits' is simply the reflection of the rising delusion of investors who frantically cling to data points that somehow support the notion 'this time is different.' As David Einhorn once stated:

“The bulls explain that traditional valuation metrics no longer apply to certain stocks. The longs are confident that everyone else who holds these stocks understands the dynamic and won’t sell either. With holders reluctant to sell, the stocks can only go up – seemingly to infinity and beyond. We have seen this before.

There was no catalyst that we know of that burst the dot-com bubble in March 2000, and we don’t have a particular catalyst in mind here. That said, the top will be the top, and it’s hard to predict when it will happen.”

Is this time different? Most likely not. Such was a point James Montier noted recently,

Current arguments as to why this time is different are cloaked in the economics of secular stagnation and standard finance workhorses like the equity risk premium model. Whilst these may lend a veneer of respectability to those dangerous words, taking arguments at face value without considering the evidence seems to me, at least, to be a common link with previous bubbles.

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While the 'bulls' are adamant, you shouldn’t 'fight the Fed' when monetary policy is loose, they say the same when it reverses. Such got evidenced by Fisher Investments arguing rate hikes are NOT bad for stocks.

“Many pundits blaming 2018’s stock market decline on that year’s Fed hikes. While we can’t predict Fed policy from here, we can correct the record on 2018, which we think had very little to do with the Fed.