The Federal Reserve (Fed) has resumed interest rate cuts after a long pause, shifting its focus from inflation concerns to supporting growth. Historically, initial cuts during strong economic periods have boosted risk assets but resumed cuts after a pause raise questions about their impact.
Reviewing 10 similar instances over the past 50 years, we found that in recession scenarios, global equities typically fell about 15% in the year before the cut. However, resumed cuts often signal that the worst is over, and risk assets have historically recovered. While stagflationary risks remain, we are constructive on the current economic environment and believe that the Fed’s renewed easing is arriving at a moment of underlying resilience, not fragility, further bolstering the case for risk assets.