Down To The Wire for the Fed and the S&P

Market On Fed Watch

As the week begins, all eyes will be on the Federal Reserve meeting, which concludes on Wednesday. This event promises to be one of the most watched days in quite some time. I think back to the most anticipated events in recent years, the multiple Greek votes, or when the Fed was expected to add or cease stimulus, but for an event so important domestically, when there seemed to be such market anticipation, I go back to September 29th 2008 when the bank bailout bill, otherwise known as TARP, was going before the U.S. House of Representatives for a vote. During the trading day then, the futures were relatively unchanged, but the more politicians were urging they had the necessary votes, the more distrusting traders were of those words. As CNBC was showing the live vote from the CSPAN feed, which was looking to be very close, the futures began to sell off, and after the bill failed, the S&P went on a seeming free fall as the Dow Jones Industrial Average tanked, closing down 777.68 points on the session.

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Is this the same as then? Hardly. I’m not suggesting it is, however, the point is that there can never be certainty surrounding such things as government beyond our control, and as likely as a December rate hike seems, it is far from definite. After all, there has only been a single dissenting vote till now favoring a rate hike, meaning that several members need to swing to the other side. Unlike in September, when it seemed possible but unlikely, and October which was virtually impossible, the market is expecting and eager for a rate hike in December. Now is the opportune time, but if the Fed disappoints after all the rhetoric preparing the markets, then the disappointment will breed uncertainty, and uncertainty is the author of panic.

Once the rate hikes start we know it’s a path that will not be reversed. The market is going respond, but there will be a lot of two way action, many instances of buy the rumor – sell the news, or vice versa, but at this point the Fed cannot risk NOT raising rates. They have made their bed, dug their trench, laid out the timetable and expectations, and now is time to deliver.

Event Driven Highs & Lows

The session after the November terror attacks in Paris, the ESZ had opened with a gap lower, making it’s monthly low, before reversing and trading more than 100 handles higher. Quickly, we saw the reversal, and wrote in the Opening Print on the topic of event driven lows. Interestingly, as the markets have seen outflow anticipating the events of this week, the S&P futures saw a trade down to those post Paris attack lows on Friday’s close, and initially bounced there on Sunday nights open.