The Fed rate is the interest rate of the US Federal Reserve System, which determines the cost of domestic loans for the American banking system. The higher the rate, the more expensive money is for banks, and as a result, loans become more expensive for the entire economy. A reduction in the rate means a reduction in the cost of loans. Let's take a closer look at how all this can affect the stock and money markets of the United States and the whole world. And we will understand why this figure attracts so much attention of financiers and investors from all over the world. But first you need to understand what the country's monetary policy is and how it is regulated.
What is monetary policy?
The well-being of any state is based on the state of the economy. And since money is the blood of the economy, the influence of the state on the monetary system is of the most important, if not the main importance.
Direct intervention and administrative measures have proved their failure, therefore, in the modern world, state bodies indirectly influence macroeconomic parameters using monetary policy methods. This policy is carried out through the influence on the development of inflation, investment, the loan capital market, the regulation of non-cash payments.
The state does not directly manage economic processes, but authorizes the central bank to do this through the implementation of laws. There is no central bank in the United States of America. There is the Ministry of Finance, there is the Federal Reserve System, which makes decisions on changing the base rate.
Thus, the change and regulation of the interest rate is the main instrument for regulating the monetary policy of the state.
Depending on the state of the country's economy, the state may have different goals of economic policy. Sometimes the state needs to stimulate economic growth, and sometimes, on the contrary, to slow down the economy that is too "accelerated" in order to avoid a classic crisis of overproduction or high inflation.
These processes are mainly regulated by the change in the Fed rate in the economy.
Read more: The history of Federal Reserve (Fed) and its functions
Application of the Fed rate to regulate the economy
As we have already said, the Fed rate determines the cost of domestic loans as a percentage per annum for commercial banks. In global practice and in banking systems, such a rate is also called the base interest rate, the discount rate or the refinancing rate. In Russia, for example, this is the "key rate of the Central Bank". Changing the discount rate is considered the main method of regulating processes in the financial and economic system of the country.
When the discount rate is lowered, money in the economy starts to cost less, the demand for loans issued by the central bank (or the Fed in the case of the United States) increases, as a result, commercial banks get the opportunity to reduce the cost of their loans and loans for enterprises also become cheaper. For enterprises of the real sector of the economy, this is a big plus, since they have less costs for servicing their loans, respectively, the profitability of production becomes higher. Also, the availability of cheaper money allows companies to launch new investment projects, as they also become more profitable due to lower loan fees.
However, an increase in the supply of money entails the danger of inflation. Regulatory organizations monitor the level of inflation, and in the event of its increase, they raise the rate again so that the economy does not enter an inflationary spiral.
Read more: Causes of inflation and scientific approaches to their study
The impact of the Fed rate on the markets
The Fed's rate ultimately affects all US markets and not only: the foreign exchange market, the money market, the stock market. However, the change in rates affects all these markets in different ways. At the same time, somewhere this influence is direct and obvious, and somewhere indirect and having a delayed effect, but nevertheless a good investor needs to understand this. Let's consider separately the impact of the Fed rate on key markets.
The impact of the Fed rate on the foreign exchange market
The impact of the Fed rate on the foreign exchange market is direct, but not always obvious. The logic of this influence is as follows: if the Fed rate rises, it becomes relatively more attractive to hold dollars or assets in dollars than those currencies where yields remain lower. This sets international capital in motion. However, it should be borne in mind that in addition to rates, thousands of factors affect the foreign exchange market-these are the balance of payments of countries that reflect the level of exports, imports, monetary policy of other countries of the world and just speculation by major players. Therefore, the correlation of exchange rates and rates may not be at all obvious. For us, investors, the impact of the Fed rate on the money and stock market is more interesting.
Read more: Are the minutes of the Federal Reserve meetings useful for investors?
The impact of the Fed rate on the bond market
The impact of the Fed rate on the money market is as direct and obvious as possible, since the discount rate is the main tool that regulates the cost of borrowed money in the economy. It should be understood that the change in the rate affects not only the cost of loans, as we have already mentioned, but also the entire money market-these are deposits, bonds, interbank lending rates, treasury notes, etc.
A decrease in interest rates almost simultaneously leads to a decrease in profitability for the entire class of fixed-income instruments. The rates on bank deposits are reduced, and the yield on bonds is reduced for investors. This is due to the growth of their exchange rate value.
Over the past few decades, we have seen a serious and protracted cycle of interest rate cuts in the United States. The strongest stage of interest rate cuts has begun since 2008. The reduction reached the point that the rate was reduced to the minimum range of values of 0% - 0.25%.
Read more: What is a Bond: types, risks, difference from stock, pros and cons
The same long period of time was accompanied by a gradual increase in the value of US bonds, and, consequently, a decrease in their yield. This corresponded to the long-term trend of growth in the value of 30-year treasury bonds and, accordingly, to the trend of declining yields.
Thus, a decrease in interest rates reduces the attractiveness of the bond market, since yields on it are declining. The yield of 30-year Treasury bonds is more often used as an indicator, but in fact, the yield of all American debt securities was declining. The general trend of profitability was downward for both government securities and corporate securities.
The impact of the Fed rate on the stock market
The stock market reacts to changes in interest rates in the opposite direction. For the stock market, a decrease in the interest rate is a positive factor, and its increase is a negative one. With a decrease in the interest rate, enterprises incur lower costs for servicing debts, their work efficiency and profits grow, plus many companies can afford to reactivate their investment projects or start implementing new ones. All this is positive for the shares of these companies, as it promises prospects for the growth of investment multipliers of companies and the prospects for significant scaling of their business.
All this makes investing in stocks more promising and profitable. And the stock market reacts to a decrease in interest rates with a long-term growing trend.
Read more: How to invest in stocks and what you need to know
On the chart as a whole, we see the long-term effect of the global cycle of interest rate cuts. We know that in the long term, stock markets tend to grow by their nature (the markets are pushed up by the growth of the world economy, progress, and so on), but the reduction of interest rates gives an additional impetus to the development of the economy and the scaling of companies ' business, due to the provision of very cheap financial resources for them.
If we consider a more local picture, then here we will see the "deferred" effect of the influence of interest rates on the stock market. In the early 2000s and in 2008, the Federal Reserve System actively lowered the interest rate in order to stop economic crises, stimulate the economy and stop panic in financial markets. And here we can see that this had its delayed effect, when after a cycle of interest rate cuts, the markets recovered.
This is especially noticeable in the dynamics of the stock market over the past few years, when after the global financial crisis of 2008, the interest rate on the market was reduced to the lowest possible range of 0% - 0.25%. This, in turn, gave an impetus to the restoration of economic growth and filled the markets with cheap liquidity, which resulted in a long and steady growth of the stock market.
Also, a positive moment for the stock market as a result of the interest rate cut is the fact that it becomes more attractive compared to the bond market, where yields only fall as a result of lower rates. This drags investors ' funds from the bond market to the stock market and, accordingly, brings additional liquidity to the stock market, which in turn, due to physical purchases by investors, also pushes the market to growth.
The short-term impact of Fed rates on the stock market
If we look at the situation even more locally, i.e. in the context of the market reaction directly on the dates of the rate changes, then it is worth considering how predictable the Fed's decision was.
As a rule, the rate change is known in advance and a forecast for several quarters ahead is given at each meeting. Therefore, it happens that the market reacts very poorly to a change in the rate, because it was known in advance. In such situations, the decision on the bid itself is not as important as the Chairman's speech and the publication of the minutes of the meeting. From them, you can learn about the forecasts of economic development and the prospects for changing the rate. For seven years from 2009 to 2016, the rate did not change and the markets reacted only to the Fed's forecasts and the publication of meeting minutes. You can get acquainted with the protocols directly on the Fed's website or wait for a translation into Russian from any Russian information agency.
When there is a sharp unscheduled change in the discount rate, that is, one that the market did not put into its expectations, the reaction of the markets is more obvious.
So in the second half of 2008, the US Open Market Committee reduced the discount rate by 0.5% 2 times and once there was a record decrease by 0.75%. Only such a complex of cardinal measures allowed to "put out the fire" in the financial markets, providing cheap financing to the banking sector.
The impact of the Fed rate on world markets
The US economy is still one of the most developed and largest economies in the world, which undoubtedly continues to act as a global engine of economic growth. Therefore, economic processes in the United States are directly reflected in the world markets of capital, raw materials and goods. And the state of the American economy is regulated, in particular, by the value of the discount rate. When the United States fills the global financial system with cheap credit resources, this affects investment processes in general and increases the inflow of investment to both developed and emerging markets. Therefore, the whole world is watching the change in the Fed rate.
The dynamics of most stock markets in the world closely correlates with the dynamics of the US stock market.
Currently, we are seeing an increase in Fed rates, which is taking place against the background of a new cycle of GDP growth. As expected, a moderate increase in rates during such a period should not negatively affect the economy and the stock market, but is carried out only for the point regulation of inflationary trends. In addition, this growth is in fact already laid down by the market, since the Fed announced it in advance.