The Fed’s Vast Gold Impact

 | Sep 20, 2015 03:50AM ET

Thursday’s Fed decision was one of the most anticipated ever, with much potential to really change the global financial market dynamics going forward. But thanks to the Fed’s incredible market distortions of recent years, Fed meetings spawning exceptional volatility is nothing new. Fed decision impacts on gold and stocks have been vast. And this next tightening cycle should reverse their Fed-imparted directionality.

The elite group within the Federal Reserve that actually makes the monetary-policy decisions is the Federal Open Market Committee. The FOMC includes ten voting members, and is led by the Fed Chair Janet Yellen herself. Four other members are from the Fed’s Board of Governors, while the remaining five are regional Fed presidents. The New York Fed has a permanent seat, while the four others rotate annually.

No other ten men and women in the world wield such enormous power over the fortunes of economies and markets, which is why investors and speculators are forced to so closely follow the Fed. The FOMC meets eight times per year for monetary-policy-setting purposes, about every six weeks or so. These meetings usually wrap up on Wednesdays with a statement outlining their decision published at 2 PM EST.

Every other meeting is followed by a press conference by the chairman. The FOMC usually saves major policy changes for that half of its meetings, since they give it an opportunity to explain its actions and calm down traders. The press-conference-followed meetings also include a summary of the economic and interest-rate projections of the ten FOMC members as well as the remaining regional Fed presidents.

As a lifelong speculator and student of the markets, I anticipate Fed days with great interest and dread. Volatility is what makes the markets fascinating and tradable, and the FOMC spawns big market moves in spades. But the anxiety comes from volatility being a sharp double-edged sword. When you get stuck on the wrong side of a trade after an FOMC decision, it’s certainly painful to weather the resulting tumult.

As I’ve thought intently about Thursday's epic Fed decision in recent weeks, I wanted to gain a better grasp of the outsized impact of recent years’ FOMC decisions on the two main markets I trade. They are gold and the stock markets. So this week I went through and analyzed the gold and stock-market action as represented by the flagship S&P 500 stock index immediately after ever FOMC decision since early 2013.

I certainly remember many volatile Fed days and their immediate aftermaths, but I was surprised at just how ubiquitous extreme FOMC-sparked volatility has been! Starting at every 2 PM FOMC decision, I looked at those trading days and the couple immediately following. In both gold and the stock markets, any single-day or several-day move beyond 1% is noteworthy. So I analyzed all net moves exceeding that.

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Amazingly I found the results a bit shocking. Since I trade and write newsletters for a living, I am very blessed to watch the markets all day, every day. So I not only lived through all 21 FOMC decisions since early 2013 in real-time, but I wrote about them extensively in our following weekly and monthly newsletters. So I remember all kinds of Fed-spawned volatility, but all those Fed days blend together to mask their magnitude.

This first chart looks at the SPX and gold since early 2013. That date is important because that’s when the Fed’s wildly unprecedented open-ended third quantitative-easing campaign ramped up to full speed. QE3 has radically distorted global markets, spawning an extraordinary stock market levitation that all but obliterated demand for alternative investments led by gold. The Fed has utterly dominated recent years.

The FOMC’s decisions, along with the associated Fed-official jawboning and resulting psychology among traders, have been the overwhelmingly dominant driver of gold and stock markets since early 2013. The Fed’s actions eclipse all secondary drivers combined by an order of magnitude, they are truly the entire market story since early 2013. There’s never been another market era where the Fed had more influence!

So every FOMC decision in this surreal span is marked with a yellow line. And starting the trading day of each 2 PM FOMC-statement release, and continuing for the following two trading days, any outsized reactions above 1% net are noted in gold and the SPX. Once again even after experiencing all of these events at a deep professional level, I was surprised at their potency and consistency considered as a whole.