Market sell-off indicates investors think the Fed is ‘behind the curve’: Strategist

In This Article:

Invesco Global Market Strategist Brian Levitt joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss the latest statements from the Fed regarding interest rate hikes, volatility, shifting consumer demands throughout the pandemic, and the outlook on markets and tech stocks.

Video Transcript

DAVE BRIGGS: For a closer look at the market sell-off, let's bring in Brian Levitt, Invesco global market strategist. Good to see you, man. Happy Friday, except for the markets. Let me reread what Janet Yellen said. I don't expect a recession. She added, a reflection of the underlying economy is not the stock market. Let's hope it's not. But what does this day indicate?

BRIAN LEVITT: Oh, it indicates that the market continues to believe that the Federal Reserve is behind the curve. And so any time you get inflation up where it is, it does speed up an economic cycle. And any time that you see a Fed behind the curve or policy uncertainty persisting, it does create volatility in markets.

And in the last days, we've had very hawkish comments recently yesterday, from Fed Chair Jay Powell, and yet inflation expectations moved higher. And so it's that the market's suggesting that the Fed is behind the curve, now pricing in three 50 basis point hikes over the next three meetings, a Fed funds rate to 3% by early 2023. And so the investors are grappling with the potential for the Fed having to tighten the screws pretty significantly here.

BRAD SMITH: Brian, in addition here to the Fed being behind the curve, part of this, too, is what we've already been seeing in this year's tape, which is some of the pandemic darlings and pandemic plays, they're seeing some of that unwinding of the growth of that deceleration of the growth. How much of that is also intertwined within these moves that we're seeing lower?

BRIAN LEVITT: Yeah, so you had a lot of those names that were trading at pretty lofty valuations amid expectations that the environment that we were living in was going to persist. And ultimately, what we've seen a shift to is some of the more reopening as the Omicron variant has dissipated. Of course, we're still dealing with other strains, but also the move higher in rich interest rates.

And so, for a lot of the names that the market had deemed perhaps a bit more speculative or needed a really perfect environment to do well, as soon as interest rates started to move higher, the markets took out those more speculative names or what they viewed to be longer duration assets. And the attention since has been to focus more on higher quality cash flow generating equities, as opposed to what some would view to be more speculative.