January Wrap: Equities Drop On Looming Rate Hikes As Markets Focus On The Fed

 | Feb 02, 2022 13:41

The lumbering giant known as the US Federal Reserve is awake and worried. It's concerned about the inflation triggered by the COVID-19 pandemic and its effects on energy prices and global supply chains. US YoY CPI was 7% in December.

So, for 2022 for sure, investors must pay attention to what the Fed does—which for now at least means pushing interest rates higher for the first time in two years after the central bank cut its key federal funds rate basically to zero to help the economy survive the pandemic.

Smart investors will continue to keep an eye on the US central bank's moves longer term since the hiking process could have a variety of knock-on effects, though some have already begun even before the rate hikes have started. Many investors seemed sucker-punched when Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said on Jan. 26 that the first interest-rate increase will probably come in March and the Fed would keep making moves until the inflation numbers came down.

Indeed, markets overall really began to focus on accelerating inflation in November 2021, right after a very frothy U.S. jobs report came out. Beginning on Nov. 8, a host of stock indices peaked, including the Russell 2000, the S&P Midcap 400, and the S&P 600 Small Cap Index. The largest cryptocurrency by market cap, Bitcoin, topped out at $68,925 on Nov. 10.

Still, the domestic economy overall has seemed to withstand the pandemic stresses. But there were side effects:

  • Higher consumer prices, especially for food, cars, building materials and other staples. Plus, rising home prices.
  • Oil prices pushing toward $90 a barrel and retail gas prices in some parts of the United States flirting with $4 a gallon.
  • A feverish stock market, especially in 2020 and 2021, helped along by abnormally low interest rates.

But after a triumphant 2021 for equities, markets finally took a breather, with all major US indices tumbling in January 2022.