Bernanke’s Santa Claus Cheer

by Scott Minerd, CIO, Guggenheim Partners LLC

December 23 2013

What will Santa bring for Christmas … does he exist at all? Yes he does, his name is Bernanke and he has a stock market rally to share and good holiday cheer for all!

Global CIO Commentary by Scott Minerd

In homes around the world, anxiety and uncertainty are at a fever pitch – what will Santa bring? Financial markets got their answer last week when an extremely dovish Federal Reserve Board Chairman Ben Bernanke used his final post-Federal Open Market Committee meeting press conference to eliminate any uncertainty over who really is Santa Claus. U.S. equity markets immediately rallied, responding to the signal that any eventual interest rate increase is farther off in the future than investors had previously anticipated. U.S. Treasury 10-year yields barely moved, having already priced-in the $10 billion reduction in the Fed’s program of quantitative easing.

It is hard to overstate just how dovish the Fed’s statement actually was. While the taper of asset purchases is small and well-signaled, the Fed also told us that while the unemployment threshold may still be 6.5 percent, it is prepared to keep the federal funds target rate at the zero-bound “well past” that level. Finally, the Fed, for the first time included an explicit lower boundary for inflation of 2 percent, below which they will not raise rates. I have long felt that the Fed would wait until 2016 or even 2017 before raising the fed funds target rate, and the FOMC comments on inflation and unemployment give the central bank the room to do just that.

We have been closely analyzing interest rate movements since the backup following the Fed’s June FOMC meeting. We expected 10-year yields to hit a peak at 3 percent, something I wrote about in my September 17th commentary, “Rising Interest Rates Must End Soon.” Yields have not moved above that threshold since then, even after Dr. Bernanke’s announcement last week that the Fed would reduce purchases starting in January. For 2014, I expect the 10-year yield will remain range-bound and less volatile. Some market observers expect yields will rise because tapering is about to start, however, now that we have passed the moment of maximum uncertainty, we could actually see yields fall. Less uncertainty, lower volatility, and the green shoots of a global synchronous expansion are all positive for risk assets. Not only did Ben Bernanke give equity markets an early Christmas present, he gave bond market investors a chance to rest, and to dream of more sugar-plums and candy canes coming next year.

Happy holidays!

Chart of the Week

Reduced Policy Uncertainty is Positive for U.S. Equities

The decision by the Federal Reserve to begin tapering quantitative easing next month removes a substantial amount of uncertainty from the market heading into 2014. Fiscal and legislative policy uncertainty are also on a downward trend, with October’s congressional battles behind us and the recent budget deal creating more confidence in the ability to reach a political compromise in the near term. Given that increases in uncertainty have weighed on stock market gains over the past several years, these developments could be positive for U.S. equities over the next few months.

ECONOMIC POLICY UNCERTAINTY INDEX AND SIX-MONTH CHANGE IN THE S&P 500

Source: Baker, Bloom, and Davis (2012), Bloomberg, & Guggenheim Investments. Data as of 12/22/2013.

Economic Data Releases

Leading Indicators Signal Bright Outlook Heading into 2014
  • The leading indicator index rose 0.8% in November, with eight out of 10 components up.
  • Existing home sales fell for a third consecutive month in November, down to an annualized rate of 4.9 million. November’s drop was the largest in over two and a half years.
  • Personal income rose less than expected in November, up 0.2% following a 0.1% drop in October.
  • Personal spending was up 0.5% in November, the seventh consecutive monthly gain.
  • Initial jobless claims rose another 10,000 after last week’s 64,000 jump, likely a continued reflection of seasonal adjustment difficulties.
  • University of Michigan consumer confidence was unrevised in the final December reading, remaining at a five-month high of 82.5.
  • Third quarter GDP was revised higher a second time, reflecting gains in personal consumption and business investment.
  • The Philadelphia Fed Business Outlook Index increased slightly to 7.0 in December after falling for two months.
  • The Chicago Fed National Activity Index rose to 0.6 in November, the best in one year.
Euro Zone Confidence Continues to Improve
  • Euro zone consumer confidence improved in December to -13.6, the best reading since July 2011.
  • GfK consumer confidence in Germany reached 7.6 in January, the highest since August 2007.
  • French business confidence ticked down to 94 in December from 95 in November, the first decrease since March.
  • Consumer confidence in Italy decreased to 96.2 in December, the lowest since June.
  • U.K. retail sales excluding autos climbed 0.4% in November, after a 0.7% decline in October.
  • Japan’s All Industry Activity Index fell 0.2% in October, the first drop in four months.
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