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All Eyes On FOMC for the Most Significant Rate Decision In Years

DailyFX.com -

Summary:

  • Global stocks begin to stabilize ahead of FOMC, as volatility levels are on the rise to reflect the tumult of the past 3 weeks.

  • Risk trends have aligned with the ‘risk on’ or ‘risk off’ themes based around global economic weakness.

  • More attractive markets may currently be seen in long USD against emerging market currencies from Mexico or South Africa.

1. Global stocks steady ahead of the Fed: After three volatile weeks of price actionacross global markets, a sense of stability has begun to show over the past 24 hours as the world nears the much-awaited September FOMC meeting. While there are numerous headline-worthy events that can be assigned a primary role for the recent tumult across global markets, the uncertainty in the communication of the Central Bank representing the world’s largest national economy is likely a large driver of confusion and fear.

This has helped to bring considerable volatility across markets: Just yesterday we saw 10-day volatility levels on Japanese stocks surpass those of the Chinese equity market that’s been taking a drubbing since mid-June. And now, we’re beginning to see volatility levels on the S&P 500 surpass those of their small-cap counterparts in the Russell 2,000 index.

We’ve seen VIX surpass the value of the Russell-VIX six times since August 24th when the outsized sell-off in China began to hit the United States with aggression. Before August 24th – this had only happened twice in the prior 11 years; which of course includes the financial collapse.

This is a huge deal: Small-cap stocks, by nature, should be more volatile than their larger and significantly-more-established brethren. The fact that we are seeing so much brutal uncertainty in large-cap names just goes to show the unexpected consequences of ZIRP and the fact investors bought up shares in large-cap names due to a dearth of available options. With rates near zero, investors that would normally buy a corporate or agency bond were left without much yield. And with a surging stock market over the past 6 years that’s seen stocks trade at all-time-highs for over two-and-a-half years, buying ‘safer’ stocks in large-cap names could be seen as a very relevant way for an investor to build their portfolio in a low-yielding environment.

This is the ‘excessive risk taking’ that the Fed has talked about in the past. One of the reasons they want to raise rates is to offset this excessive risk taking. But if excessive risk taking has already taken place, and the Fed looks to embark on this hike – then the unwind of this theme means that we’ll likely see more volatility, and more pain for stock prices in the months ahead.