Investors only care about interest rates - not economic growth

Despite weak earnings estimates and trade war concerns, the focus for the stock market is all on Jerome Powell

FILE PHOTO: Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell holds a press conference following a two day Federal Open Market Committee policy meeting in Washington, U.S., January 30, 2019. REUTERS/Leah Millis/File Photo
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You’ve heard all the warnings. Economic growth is wobbly, earnings estimates are down, the trade war rages on. From a vocal category of investors on Wall Street, a rebuttal: who cares?

There’s no point worrying about stuff that failed to move stocks for years, when the one thing that has - Jerome Powell’s Federal Reserve - was beaten into submission. A corps of steadfast bulls has decided the only meaningful thing they’ve seen over the past five months is the triumph of doves at the central bank.

After all, it was only last September that Mr Powell himself framed overheating asset prices as the biggest threat markets were likely to pose to the US economy. Now, after a 10,000-point round-trip in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, asset prices are near where they began. What’s gone is any sense the Fed means what it says when it says it’s getting tough.

“At the end of the day, when push comes to shove, the Fed acquiesces to whatever the market’s view is,” says Brent Schutte, chief investment strategist at Northwestern Mutual Wealth Management, which manages about $125 billion. “Which is what happened. The Fed’s economic outlook I don’t believe changed all that much, but the market convinced them that they were wrong.”

Around Wall Street, they’re on board with the rally. Ned Davis Research upgraded US stocks in early February, saying “don’t fight the Fed.” UBS Group's Keith Parker forecasts stocks will reach new highs by June, citing a patient central bank. And Tony Dwyer at Canaccord Genuity expects a sustained market rally, giving significant credit to Mr Powell’s pivot.

To be sure, it’s far from a unanimous view. DoubleLine Capital’s Jeffrey Gundlach said last week that stocks are in a bear market and will probably plunge back below last year’s Christmas Eve low at some point in 2019. Jerry Braakman, chief investment officer for First American Trust, shares the opinion.

“We still think we’re looking at a bear market here,” says Mr Braakman, whose firm manages $1.5bn. “When you look at what’s working in the market versus what’s struggling, we still see a setup where GDP is slowing, inflation is slowing.”

But neither is raging bullishness an outlier on Wall Street, which has shown itself willing to live with sluggish growth for a decade. Among 25 equity strategists tracked by Bloomberg, forecasts for end-of-year S&P 500 range as high as 3,250, roughly a 15 per cent increase from now. Seven are at 3,000 or above.

At the crux of the debate is Mr Powell’s willingness to acknowledge the market’s temper in moderating his hawkishness. He had a chance to stand firm in the face of fairly ordinary turbulence, and didn’t. In relenting, some critics warn, he’s diluted his ability to put a brake on upward volatility that will one day create a bubble.

It had been the risk of markets going berserk to the upside that had most visibly worried the Fed chairman prior to the end of last year. When the Fed raised rates for the first time under Mr Powell’s purview, the chairman described “moderate vulnerabilities” by way of elevated asset prices. Back in September, Mr Powell told business leaders equity prices were high, and while he didn’t see “high vulnerabilities,” prudence was warranted.

All that changed in January, when the chairman put new significance on market volatility - some even designating sanguine stocks as the Fed’s “third mandate.” Various members have expressed comfort with inflation going considerably higher, with Mr Powell saying last week that “we need to make sure inflation doesn’t keep slipping” toward nothing.

“The message from the Fed - that they’re going to tolerate an inflation overshoot - that message will become more clear in the coming months,” says Ethan Harris, head of global economics research at Bank of America Merrill Lynch. “They’re in the process of reevaluating their framework. That’s a pretty friendly message out of the Fed.”

The Federal Reserve board meets this week with a policy decision due on Wednesday. While no one expects the Fed to raise rates, investors will be eyeing the dot plot and looking for more details on the balance sheet.

Equity valuations could expand mightily, some say. According to Nathan Thooft, Manulife Asset Management’s head of global asset allocation, it’s not unrealistic that stocks trade at a price-earnings ratio as high as 20 when financial conditions are this loose. With earnings for companies in the S&P 500 expected to come in at $167.50 a share this year, that results in an S&P 500 at 3,350, up 20 percent from current levels.

And while the stock rally paused earlier this month, it’s back on now. The S&P 500 is up with technology stocks again leading the way and the Cboe Volatility Index, or the VIX, is down, touching the lowest levels since the start of October.

Of course, Mr Powell has pivoted before, and may do it again.