Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility Bullish on Fed Easing?
at
de
institutional
institutional
false
true
Gathering data
Disclaimer Not Available

Bullish on Fed easing?

Bullish on Fed easing?

As expected, the Federal Open Market Committee delivered another 25-basis point rate cut. Investors are now focused on the pace of cuts from here. However, the more important driver of future equity returns is whether the Fed is easing into an economy that is growing or not. 

Chart-of-the-week-twentyfive


Last week, the Federal Reserve delivered a widely anticipated 25-basis point rate cut, What caught the market’s attention was pushback by Fed Chair Powell on the certainty of a December cut. But, regardless of the pace of easing from here, history tells us that future equity market performance is positive when the Fed eases into a growing economy. 

According to our research dating back to the 1980s, stocks delivered an average gain of 16.5% in the 12 months following the first cut of an easing cycle as long as a recession was avoided. The number ticks up to 44.5% over the first 24 months. While the Fed’s easing arguably started last year, we view the latest cuts and future expectations as a new cycle.

Given our outlook for continued positive economic growth over the next year, combined with an improving earnings backdrop, we expect more equity gains to come.  

VERWANDTE THEMEN
Higher inflation, contained expectations
Chart of the Week | Makroökonomisch

Inflation has jumped since the Strait of Hormuz closed, squeezing consumers through higher gas and utility bills and pressuring businesses with higher freight and operating costs. Yet, longer-term inflation expectations remain contained, suggesting this looks more like a temporary energy shock than a lasting inflation upswing.

Steady hiring, fewer layoffs
Chart of the Week | Makroökonomisch

May’s jobs report showed a labor market that is improving, with payroll growth exceeding expectations and layoffs down sharply from last year. Steady hiring and fewer layoffs should continue to support consumer spending and U.S. economic growth.

A broader foundation for earnings growth
Chart of the Week | Makroökonomisch

Although companies benefiting most directly from AI-related capital spending are the main drivers of higher earnings, strength is no longer confined to that group. Earnings across the broader market remain solid and are expected to grow more than 10% this year and next, suggesting the risk of concentrated market leadership may not be founded.

Is the job market stabilizing?
Chart of the Week | Makroökonomisch

After sluggish job growth in 2025, investors are looking for signs that the labor market may be stabilizing. With consumer spending driving 70% of economic activity, an improving labor market is essential to sustaining economic growth.

Gathering data
Disclaimer Not Available

Dies ist eine Marketingkommunikation