vendredi 12 juillet 2019

Worried About the Fed? Don't Be -- Here's Why

By Elliott Wave International

Achieving and maintaining success as a stock market investor is a tall order.
You, like many others, probably watch financial TV networks, read analysis and talk to fellow investors, trying to understand what's next for the stock market.
One popular stock market "indicator" is interest rates. Mainstream analysts parse every word from the Fed, hoping they hear a clue about interest rates. They assume that falling rates mean higher stock prices, while rising rates mean lower stock prices.
For example, in July 5, CNBC ran this headline:
Trump's Fed pick Shelton says she doesn't want to 'pull the rug out' from under the stock market
Fed nominee Judy Shelton was suggesting that higher rates would hurt the stock rally.
But does the conventional wisdom about interest rates and stocks square with reality? Let's do a brief historical review.
From October 1974 to December 1976, the stock market rose as the Fed funds rate trended lower. This occurred again from July 1984 to August 1987. Conversely, stock prices faltered as interest rates climbed from January 1973 to October 1974 and again from December 1976 to February 1978. So far, so good: rates up/stocks down, or vice versa.
But stock prices have also fallen as interest rates declined -- more than once. Take a look at the chart below. The commentary is from Robert Prechter's 2017 book, The Socionomic Theory of Finance:
[The chart] shows a history of the four biggest stock market declines of the past hundred years. They display routs of 54% to 89%. In all these cases, interest rates fell, and in two of those cases they went all the way to zero!
The next chart shows you when stocks and interest rates trended higher together. You can see the Dow rise from March 2003 to October 2007 as rates climb from around 1% to over 5%.
Here's the point: There is no consistent relationship between interest rates and the stock market.
That doesn't mean volatility will be absent around the time of a Fed meeting. But, if that ever happens, keep this in mind from a classic Elliott Wave Theorist:
The Fed's decision will not cause any such volatility; it just may (or may not) coincide with it. Whether volatility continues around the Fed's meeting is up to the markets, not the Fed. ... [The] Fed's meeting, therefore, is not crucial, pivotal, historic or momentous. It is mostly irrelevant.
Yes, enjoying consistent success as a stock market investor is a major challenge. But, believing in the myth that interest rates have a big influence on the stock market makes success even harder. And, we have several more popular myths to dispel for you in an Elliott Wave International free report, "Market Myths Exposed."
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