Conflicting Views on Rate Cuts

Sep 18, 2024

With this week’s widely anticipated rate cut, equity markets seem optimistic about the economy, but bond investors worry the Fed may have missed its window to forestall a recession. Who’s right?

Author
Lisa Shalett

Key Takeaways

  • Equity markets may expect an economic “soft landing,” but investors shouldn’t brush off bond-market signals that a recession looms.
  • Global economic growth appears fragile, uncertainty among small businesses is high, and U.S. consumers are exhausting their savings.
  • Given such risks, consider investment opportunities in financials, industrials, energy, materials, healthcare and parts of the technology sector.

With this week’s widely anticipated interest rate cut by the U.S. Federal Reserve, investors face a conundrum: Stocks and bonds appear to be sending conflicting signals about the economy’s path forward.

 

For stocks, consider that the S&P 500 Index has recovered from a mid-summer swoon and rallied roughly 8.5%, back within striking distance of its all-time high. Underpinning this rally has been an expectation among many equity investors that the economy will enjoy a “soft landing,” driven by economic growth, productivity gains and profit-margin expansion.

 

Meanwhile, bond prices have rallied as yields have plummeted, particularly shorter-term rates. As a result, the closely watched two-and-10-year Treasury yield curve, which has been “inverted” since July 2022, has rapidly “un-inverted,” seeming to imply a looming recession.

 

Remember, an inverted yield curve shows that bonds with nearer-term maturity dates have higher yields than longer-term bonds – indicating that investors may be wary of recession and are favoring longer-term bonds for their perceived “safety” from a potentially falling equity market. That pushes longer-term bonds’ prices up and their yields down.

 

However, inverted yield curves often un-invert before a slowdown hits, as investors anticipate the Fed swiftly and steeply cutting its overnight rate to support the economy. Today, market-based forecasts suggest there will be as many as 250 basis points of cuts by next December. Historically, that speed and amount has only been associated with a Fed that’s “behind the curve” in easing monetary policy.

Outlook on the Economy

Is the economy on track for a soft landing (as equity markets suggest), or has the Fed kept rates too high for too long (as bond markets seem to imply)? Morgan Stanley’s Global Investment Committee’s still anticipates a soft landing. However, we take seriously the warnings implicit in Treasury market moves, as negative surprises may be brewing in at least three areas.

Is the Fed Behind the Curve?

While equity markets may be counting on a soft landing, bond markets are signaling a potential recession. Here's why investors shouldn't dismiss the warnings.

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  1. 1
    Global economic growth looks fragile.

    Many investors have long expected an economic recovery outside of the U.S. to support U.S. stocks, given that roughly one-third of S&P 500 company profits come from overseas. That said, commodity markets may be sending worrisome cues. The recent decline in oil prices, for example, is being compared to drops seen during recessionary periods. Worse-than-anticipated data from China may also be fueling investor concern: The country remains weighed down by poor consumer confidence and weak consumption, as well as a still-tentative recovery in the residential property market. Economists have cut China’s next-year growth estimates to below the critical threshold of 5%. 

  2. 2
    Treasury investors are likely digesting weak readings from recent small-business surveys.

    These surveys suggest the level of uncertainty among small businesses, which account for about two-thirds of U.S. jobs, is around its highest since 2020. Sales expectations are at a four-year low, while hiring and capital investment intentions are also fading. Even as total U.S. non-farm payrolls remain positive, there have been net losses in small-business jobs in recent months, and bond investors may view this signal as the canary in the coal mine.

  3. 3
    Treasury investors may see vulnerability among U.S. consumers.

    Equity investors are likely encouraged by factors like robust retail sales, inflation-adjusted growth in household incomes, and improving consumer sentiment. However, as we recently noted, households have been exhausting their savings and grown more dependent on their paychecks and wage gains to continue spending. Also, defaults on consumer debt are rising. Critically, The Conference Board’s measure of whether jobs are “plentiful or hard to get,” which historically has correlated with corporate profit growth, recently shifted to a more negative outlook. 

How Should Investors Respond?

Again, Morgan Stanley remains cautiously optimistic about a soft landing. That said, conditions are fragile and uncertainty is high – a dynamic that’s complicated by the upcoming U.S. elections.  

 

This is not a time for complacency. Investors should seek out value and neutralize any assets in which their portfolios are over-invested. Consider reducing ultra-short and money-market positions and locking in still-high rates on longer-dated debt. Look to the equal-weighted S&P 500 as a better risk-adjusted exposure than the cap-weighted version.

 

Lastly, we continue to find compelling investments in financials, industrials, energy, materials and healthcare, along with parts of the technology sector like software, and think there may be more defensive ideas in residential real estate investment trusts (REITs) and utilities. Non-U.S. assets should benefit portfolios as the U.S. dollar potentially weakens.

 

This article is based on Lisa Shalett’s Global Investment Committee Weekly report from September 16, 2024, “Is the Fed behind the Curve?” Ask your Morgan Stanley Financial Advisor for a copy. Listen to the audiocast based on this report.

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