An AP article out today on yahoo questions whether stocks will climb much higher when fed stops raising rates.
The article quotes a note by Bank of America's Thomas McManus titled "Popular view of 'what happens when the Fed stops' is based on too few cycles."
McManus apparently looked at 20 separate tightening cycles over more than 50 years, and found that the Standard & Poor's 500 performed better, on average, in the year leading up to a peak in rates than it did the year after the peak.
"This should not be a surprise," he wrote, "as earnings are generally robust during Fed tightening, and the signals for the FOMC (Federal Open Market Committee) to move to the sidelines have typically included indications of a weaker economy, which can easily undermine stock valuations, even in a more supportive interest rate environment."
So, if the rate hikes end in 2006 and if the market sticks to historical patterns and performs worse than it did in 2005, then 2006 could be nothing special.
That's not to say the end of Federal Reserve short-term rate hikes will hurt stocks. McManus found that each sector of the S&P 500 provided positive returns, on average, in the 12 months after rates peaked, but only three sectors provided double-digit returns. Those three sectors were consumer staples, health care and financial stocks, which are traditionally defensive sectors, the ones that tend to do well when the overall market is weak.
Here's link to full story.
www.biz.yahoo.com/ap/060114/wall_main.html?.v=4