Bulls Need Goldilocks Soft-Landing Scenario to Keep Reining Supreme

 | Jan 10, 2024 05:07

Market narratives have been around for ages. However, the internet and, more recently, social media allow narratives to spread much quicker. Accordingly, they have become more frequent and potent market forces.

Following economic data, corporate earnings, politics, global affairs, and many other factors are still crucial for investors.

Equally important, especially over short periods, is identifying which narrative(s) most heavily impact markets.

Today’s popular narrative is a growing consensus for the Fed to engineer a soft landing and a Goldilocks economy. It’s worth appreciating the Fed and Jerome Powell, purposely or not, started the narrative.

As the fiscal stimulus that drove above-average economic growth in the post-pandemic era exits the system and monetary policy remains very tight, economists and investors wonder what comes next.

The scenario rapidly gaining in popularity is the Goldilocks narrative.

In case you forgot, Goldilocks and The Three Bears start with Papa, Mama, and Baby Bear leaving their house for a walk while their porridge cools.

Goldilocks enters their home and tastes the three bowls of porridge. Papa’s is too hot, and Mama’s is too cold. Baby Bear’s is just right. She also finds Baby’s chair and bed are just right, not too hard or soft. Goldilocks prefers things “just right.”

Like the tale, a Goldilocks economic scenario is a slowdown to more sustainable growth rates. Such does not involve a recession or high inflation. For most asset markets, it’s a dream scenario.

Regardless of what you or I think, markets are currently taking their cue from Goldilocks, at least until the next narrative takes charge.

The Fed Brought Goldilocks To Life/h2

On November 1, 2023, the Fed hinted that the Goldilocks era is in view. Per our Commentary following the meeting:

Of importance, Chairman Powell stated: “Financial conditions have tightened significantly in recent months due to longer-term rates.” Further, he says the stronger dollar and weaker equity prices will weigh on economic growth.

As long as those conditions remain persistent, the Fed is unlikely to hike rates. Based on trading yesterday afternoon, the stock and bond markets seem to agree the Fed is likely done raising rates.

Assuming economic activity does slow, the market will start anticipating rate cuts.

Starting in November, the “pause” was on. As we predicted, the market turned its attention to when the Fed might cut rates. At the following meeting on December 13, the Goldilocks narrative came to be. From our Commentary that next morning:

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This meeting included the Fed’s quarterly economic and rate projections and comparisons to September.

As we show, the Fed’s median estimate is for three 25bps rate cuts next year. One participant sees rates falling 1.25% by the end of next year. The minutes and projections are more dovish than the market expected.

The stock and bond markets rocketed as rate cuts and no recession, i.e., Goldilocks, translated into buy, buy, and buy more.

Since November 1, 2024, highlighted below, the S&P 500 (SPY (NYSE:SPY)) has been up 12%, and 20-year UST (NASDAQ:TLT) has risen over 15%.