Wells Fargo strategist says investors may face 1995 rerun once Fed cuts rates

Alan Greenspan was the Fedā€™s chairman during the 1995 rate-cut cycle that may serve as a historical analogue to current conditions. - Saul Loeb/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

In This Article:

It was the summer of 1995. NASAā€™s space endurance record was broken, at a laughable 84 days compared to the two astronauts now who, DONā€™T CALL THEM STRANDED, may be in weightlessness for eight months. Johnnie Cochran was saying something poetic about gloves fitting, and the movie Waterworld was, um, drowning at the box office.

That was also a period when the Federal Reserve, then led by Alan Greenspan, embarked on an interest rate-cut cycle that may have parallels to what the markets are expecting for September.

Most Read from MarketWatch

The 1995 cycle coincided with disinflation and an economic soft landing that, importantly, did not morph into a recession. ā€œThere are enough similarities that the [1995 cycle] could provide a potential roadmap for corporate earnings and equity prices in the coming quarters,ā€ said Chris Haverland, global equity strategist at the Wells Fargo Investment Institute.

Investors would happily sign off to what happened. Earnings for the S&P 500 index companies rose by 12% in the year following the first rate cut. The S&P 500 soared more than 40% in the 18 months after, though mid- and small-caps didnā€™t rise by as much.

-

The sector mix was split, as this chart shows. Financials led the way, and Haverland says that performance could repeat itself now, as it recently upgraded the sector. Interestingly, the information technology sector outperformed leading into the first rate cut but then consolidated over the next six to 12 months, before reasserting itself as a leader. ā€œIf the sector takes a similar path during the upcoming easing cycle, we will look for opportunities to upgrade even given expectations for above-market growth,ā€ he adds.

Granted, the current monetary policy cycle saw a much higher peak in inflation, and the Fed has held rates at peak levels for much longer. ā€œEven so, we think the U.S. economy will avoid a recession and gradually strengthen through 2025. This, along with easier financial conditions, should support continued corporate earnings growth, equity-market strength, and our favorability toward high-quality companies within U.S. large-cap equities,ā€ he said.