Equity Market Winners And Losers After The Fed’s Rate Hike

 | Dec 20, 2016 12:46AM ET

The Federal Reserve announced last week it would raise interest rates for the second time since the Financial Crisis. The hike increases the Fed’s target range 25bps higher to 50-75 bps, but more importantly it sets the stage for multiple rate increases in 2017. Equities responded with a quick sell-off following the news, but have since recovered any initial losses. In the short term, this will influence earnings prospects across multiple industries and companies. Banks and insurance companies will likely benefit the most, while multinationals, automakers and oil producers could be hit hardest.h2 Winners/h2

Banks: There is a long held belief that when interest rates rise, so do bank profits. Retail bank operations are predicated on net interest margins, which is the difference in the amount received for extending a loan to what is paid to savers. Since the Financial Crisis this measure of performance has struggled thanks to quantitative easing and near zero interest rates. Now that rates appear to be on the rise, the financial sector can ascend to prominence once again. It helps that President-elect Trump is taking a lenient stance on the financial sector as he intends to repeal some parts of Dodd-Frank. The combination of the two pushed the Financial Select Sector SPDR (NYSE:XLF), which tracks stocks in the financial sector, up over 20% in the past 3 months. Many individual equities will benefit in the coming months but none more than Bank of America (NYSE:BAC). Each of these financial institutions has already started to show new life this year and will only continue to improve come next earnings season.

Insurers: Few companies were rooting harder for a rate hike than U.S. insurance companies. Insurers typically make money from investing premiums into high quality bonds, whose yields suffered amid the sustained low interest rate environment. Last week’s hike along with the promise of three more in 2017 should be a much needed financial boost. Watch Google (NASDAQ:GOOGL), all of which hold a huge presence internationally.

Automakers: Unlike the housing market, automotives don’t rally behind a rate hike. Simply put, rising rates make it more expensive to purchase a car in the U.S. while a strong dollar does the same for foreign markets. This won’t do the Ford s (NYSE:F) or GMs (NYSE:GM) of the world any favors. Ford, in particular, struggled to meet its targets during the third quarter despite favorable oil prices and low interest rates. It won’t be surprising if analysts at Estimize drag down fourth quarter estimates even further in the coming months. That said, the whole automotive industry won’t come under fire. Repair shops like Advanced Auto Parts (NYSE:AAP) typically thrive when interest rates rise because it then becomes cheaper to fix a car rather than buy a new one.

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Oil: Anything that happens in the economy impacts oil prices. Due to a preexisting OPEC agreement, oil is quoted in U.S. dollars. As mentioned above, strength in the dollar doesn’t do Corporate America and now oil any favors. Following the announcement, the price of WTI Crude dropped by nearly $1 but has since recovered its losses. Its unlikely that this puts lasting pressure on the oil majors (ExxonMobil (NYSE:XOM), etc.), which made a huge leap following new arrangements for OPEC and Russia to cut production. If anything, the two factors will offset and oil producers will be back to square one.

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