Monthly Market Update: The real risk

Investors worry about equity volatility. However this is, by and large, transient. Instead, we should all be cognisant that we are in a paradigm shift. If growth falters and inflation doesn’t break, the central banks’ mandate and independence may be up for review.

A lot can happen in eight minutes. You can boil an egg. You can read eight pages of a novel. You can
brew a coffee. You can wait for the sun’s light to reach you. Apparently, you can also wipe $78 billion out of existence. In his annual address at Jackson Hole, Fed Chairman Jay Powell reverted to hawkish form and suggested that the Fed will keep raising rates until inflation’s back is broken. This comes into sharp contrast with the Fed’s remark just one month ago that “the rate is close to neutral”, which traders took as a sign that rate hikes were drawing to a close and rallied. The reversal in equity markets was spectacular.

In eight short minutes, most stocks turned negative, and the S&P 500 experienced one of its worst days in two years. None of this comes as a surprise. We are in a bear market and volatility is to be expected. Inflation is so high and markets have learned to over-dissect every world the Fed says, that inconsistencies and policy uncertainty are also to be expected. Traders and investors need to forget what they heard in Jackson Hole. Instead, they need to focus on one leading indicator: Fed Assets. The Fed is raising its Quantitative Tightening cap from $45b to $95b. Will it siphon money from markets at a fast pace? Its true intentions will be shown in that field, not in policy speeches.

The game is one of balance. Markets must be ready for rate hikes, but they should not be panicking.
We are honestly less worried about equity volatility and more worried about the long-term implications
of the Fed’s approach.

George Lagarias – Chief Economist