Higher Rates Will Hurt Stocks Far More Than You Think

 | Oct 05, 2018 12:57AM ET

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell thinks the economy is awesome. And he has no problem telling us so.

What Powell will never discuss, however, is the “way-too-low-for-way-too-long” stimulus that the central bank engaged in to get here. In particular, the Fed has kept the neutral rate of interest far beneath the rate of inflation (CPI) for an entire decade. Consumers, corporations and Uncle Sam predictably borrowed as if there’d never be consequences.

What consequences? Asset bubbles.

Stocks, bonds, real estate, collectibles, cryptos, alternatives, everything. Straight across the ouija board.

Perhaps ironically, we have seen this streaming video before. “Too-low-for-to-long” rate policy in the previous economic expansion (11/01-12/07) created an environment whereby the quality and the quantity of household mortgage debt became toxic.

Granted, mortgage debt is less of an issue in the current credit cycle. Nevertheless, total household debt levels may not be sustainable at higher average interest costs.