While the expected rate hike is well-anticipated, priced in (according to the usual suspect sources), and measured (one 25 BP hike per quarter is the new normal), markets will still see the rising rate environment for what it is: an economy killer, attracting all money to US treasuries and out of competing negative or near-zero-interest-paying bills, notes and bonds in other countries.
When the FOMC announces its policy decision at 2:00 pm EDT, the world will change in some small but all bad ways. Credit card payers will see their required monthly debt installments rise, any interest-rate sensitive debt obligations (most of it) will become more expensive, and, perhaps most important of all, stock buybacks will no longer appear to be the bargain they once were, when companies could borrow at extremely low interest rates to repurchase their own stock, rather than invest in capital equipment and labor.
The elephant in the room is the buyback scheme, one which has boosted stock prices to dizzying levels, based largely on lowered expectations via reducing the number of shares outstanding. Companies which had chosen to engage in the dumbest money move in recent history will still be clueless about how to expand their existing businesses. They will not invest in their own operations. They will not increase wages nor hire more human capital. They will continue their cowardly retreat into self-interested stock incentive bonuses for key executives, as if those people are the only ones in the organization who matter.
Sadly, US corporations are badly managed and have been for quite some time. The rot within the boardrooms and executive suites began many decades ago and has only accelerated though the first two decades of the new century, long after the "Greed is Good" Gordon Gecko exclamation point from the 90s.
Today, the fictional Mr. Gecko would be ridiculed for his naivety, modesty, and restraint by the avaricious purveyors of corporate theft currently occupying the positions of CEO and CFO at many major corporations traded globally.
As corporate executives continue to be glorified as champions of free enterprise and business leaders, elevated to the level of gods and goddesses, the corruption that has engulfed the entire political and economic spectrum will come to full bloom, the excesses and poor decisions exacerbated by tightening finial conditions. Just when everything becomes more dear and out of reach to the ordinaries, the wealthy and connected will resort to outright, in-your-face larceny, justified by an entitled mindset.
Once it begins to get worse, the levels of lawlessness, greed, immorality, and corruption will become unbearable, but, as it was in 2008 and 2009, none of the most obvious criminals will go to jail. Few will even be indicted.
When it's obvious that stocks are going to continue devaluing - a condition that's probably well-understood already by the elite - the rats will jump ship en masse along with their ill-gotten gains.
The short-term rally that began on June 1 may not end immediately after the FOMC decision, but it almost certainly will end shortly thereafter. The NASDAQ made a new all-time high on Tuesday while the Dow languished with a minor loss, ending a four-day win streak as it reached the upper band of its recent trend line.
Now comes the losing.
Next comes the lying.
Dow Jones Industrial Average June Scorecard:
Date | Close | Gain/Loss | Cum. G/L |
6/1/18 | 24,635.21 | +219.37 | +219.37 |
6/4/18 | 24,813.69 | +178.48 | +397.85 |
6/5/18 | 24,799.98 | -13.71 | +384.14 |
6/6/18 | 25,146.39 | +346.41 | +730.55 |
6/7/18 | 25,241.41 | +95.02 | +825.57 |
6/8/18 | 25,316.53 | +75.12 | +900.69 |
6/11/18 | 25,322.31 | +5.78 | +906.47 |
6/12/18 | 25,320.73 | -1.58 | +904.89 |
At the Close, Tuesday, June 12, 2018:
Dow Jones Industrial Average: 25,320.73, -1.58 (-0.01%)
NASDAQ: 7,703.79, +43.87 (+0.57%)
S&P 500: 2,786.85, +4.85 (+0.17%)
NYSE Composite: 12,844.72, -12.24 (-0.10%)