Rithm Capital: A Dividend Stock That Loves Inflation

 | Sep 21, 2022 05:20AM ET

The stock market keeps falling and falling because, for the first time in 14 years, there’s nobody to catch it.

The “Fed put” has expired.

The genesis of the Federal Reserve’s implicit put—the notion that the Fed will fix any decline—was the 2008 Financial Crisis. With the financial system on the ropes, the stock market itself became “too big to fail” as far as the Fed was concerned. Then-Chairman Ben Bernanke printed a bunch of money, boosted the market and became a Wall Street (bank, at least) hero.

Since then, the Fed has cradled the stock market. Anytime the S&P 500 hiccups or corrects, the central bank steps in to print money. This liquidity stabilizes stock prices.

This implicit “insurance” has been called the Fed put. It borrows from options investing.

When we buy puts, we are generally buying insurance on securities in our portfolio. Puts rise in value as stock prices drop. The Fed kindly provided US investors with—in effect—complimentary portfolio insurance (a put) for the past 14 years!

This floated a bull market in which investors rarely worried about stock prices going down. Anytime the S&P 500 (“America’s ticker”) dipped, there was no need to fear. The Fed would cut rates, accommodate, and do what it had to do to keep the market from tumbling.

It seemed like the easy money would last forever. Heck, even your moderate dividend analyst shrugged off nearly every market concern! Why worry when we know that the Fed will just paper it over?

On Contrarian Income Report webcasts I cited the Fed as the ultimate catalyst for stock prices. Geopolitical tensions, virus numbers and domestic political unrest couldn’t weigh stocks down while the Fed printed money.

But Fed Chairman Jay Powell finally overdid it with this 2020-inspired balance sheet explosion:

h2 The Fuel Behind the Fed’s Put