Fed Cut Bucks September Curse in Stocks
Beware the rate-cut hangover...
IMAGINE you're packed shoulder to shoulder in a huge arena to see your
favorite band, writes Greg
Guenther in Addison Wiggin's Daily
Reckoning.
The group is ripping through the final number of its encore
performance and the scene is
getting wild. A wall of sound slams into the sweaty crowd as everyone shouts along to the final verse.
Fireworks ignite, drumsticks
fly, and the singer thanks the crowd...
Everyone hustles off stage and the
house lights come up as the
cheering crowd starts to settle. You and thousands of strangers waited months to see this show – and it
didn't disappoint.
Now, it's over.
You're left drenched in sweat, ears ringing,
completely exhausted. Everyone
around you is aimlessly shuffling around trying to find the exit. You're squinting to adjust to the
newly bright conditions, still
buzzing from the music as you slowly fade back to reality. You don't have to go home, but you can't stay
here.
Well, folks, it wasn't nearly as exciting as a rock concert. But last month's rate cut and
its immediate aftermath have
dragged many of these same feelings out of your fellow investors.
We were led
into the main event with plenty
of over-the-top media fanfare, promising a brand new rate cut regime. And when Powell pulled the
trigger, we were treated to 50 bps to
kick off the show. Expectations were high – and the Fed delivered.
The rest of
the week was a blur. After a
little hesitation following the announcement, the Dow and the S&P 500 managed to log new all-time
highs the next trading day. The
party was on!
But the house lights are back on. The music's over. All that's
left are throngs of dazed
investors wandering in circles, waiting to see what happens next...
...and new
all-time highs never felt
so...uneventful.
Maybe investors are just hungover from the rate-cut noise
pumped into their living rooms for
the past month. Perhaps we're simply dealing with a classic case of recency bias spurred by the late
summer selloff. Or maybe the
lackluster moves led by utilities and staples soured the mood.
Any of these
scenarios could have spoiled the
bull market vibe.
But I think the bulk of the blame lies with the Fed's
interest rate decision.
Everyone knew a cut was coming and came into that Wednesday ready to party. But now that
the main event is over, the
Fed's policy shift is only creating more uncertainty. Investors from Broad & Wall to Main Street are
racking their brains to
decipher what drove the FOMC's decision – and what could mean for the rest of the year.
Did the Fed wait too
long to cut? Are they behind the curve, just like they were in 2022? Does a double-cut mean we're
hurtling toward an imminent
recession?
I have no idea. But I do know that I'm not worried about the dreaded
R-word. Instead, I prefer to
focus on price and the underlying trend – two facts on which we can rely during any market
environment.
Whether you choose to follow price or not, one thing is certain: No one likes change. Resist as we
might, as scary as it may be, the
rate-cut cycle is here.
And that's not all...
Third-quarter earnings season
festivities will quickly follow. Fall is suddenly upon us. Now's the perfect time to review how stocks
are faring and the potential
seasonal headwinds that lie ahead following this rate-cut uncertainty.
October
marks a critical turning point
for stocks. It concludes the worst six months of the year for US equities, kicking off the best time of
year to buy
stocks.
October not only signals a significant shift in seasonal trends – it
also has a knack for
bottom-ticking the market, marking the low of 13 bear markets since World War II, per Trader's Almanac
(most recently, the Dow ripped
14% in October 2022).
But here's the thing: We've not been experiencing a bear
market.
Stock market bulls aren't searching for potential support zones. Instead, they're exploring
unchecked levels of overhead
supply.
First half leaders are making up lost ground following the late summer
selling session. Rotation is
leading to broadening participation beneath the surface. And a new leadership group is emerging:
small-caps. These conditions would be
better described as the second year of a bull run, as opposed to the end of an ugly
downtrend.
Bull vs. Bear
aside, the presidential election will take place in November. When it comes to the average October
performance during election years,
seasonal tailwinds favor the bears.
The average October returns during election
years since 1950 look like
this: Dow -1%, S&P 500 -0.9%, Nasdaq -2.2%.
Let's go a little farther down
the seasonality rabbit hole.
Remember the stocks-only-go-up frenzy that kicked off 2021? It was impossible to miss! The stock market
was handing out participation
trophies made of solid gold...everyone's a winner!
Later that year, reality set
in as IWM tanked during
November, its strongest seasonal month of the year.
Stocks in 2024 instead
stayed green during September,
traditionally the weakest month of the year. In fact, a traditionally volatile September turned into an
absolute barnburner, the first
positive September in five years.
That's a welcome change for investors, who've
recently dealt with some
downright dreadful Septembers recently (S&P dropped almost 5% in September 2023, FactSet notes, and
more than 9% in September
2022).
Bottom line: Seasonality studies serve as a roadmap, not a definitive
forecasting tool.
In fact, the most useful information comes when markets buck seasonal trends (like they're
doing right now).
Your best course of action is to remain cautious and give the market room to work out some
of this rate cut
angst.
Anything can happen – but I would not expect an all-out meltdown going
forward. Instead, stay alert
for a little chop, and maybe a fake out or two lower as we kick off Q4. And keep an eye on the strongest
names over the next few
weeks. These could be your new leaders when melt up season arrives.











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