Recalibrated Fed expectations have ‘shaken the confidence of markets’: Strategist

In This Article:

Kate Moore, BlackRock head of thematic strategy for the global allocation team, joins Yahoo Finance Live’s Julie Hyman and Brian Sozzi to discuss the outlook for the 2022 stock market, prospects for growth, changes in the consumer, major investment themes, and digital transformation.

Video Transcript

JULIE HYMAN: Let's talk about, though, what people in the market are watching for in those Powell comments, as well as what they're watching for more broadly. For that we bring in Kate Moore, Head of Thematic Strategy for the Global Allocation team at BlackRock. Kate, it's great to see you this morning.

Obviously, as I sort of alluded to earlier, the market seems to have woken up to the possibility, if not the likelihood, that we are going to get multiple interest rate increases this year. We've seen a lot of pressure on tech stocks, in particular as a result of that assumption. What do you make of all of this, and do you think-- How sustained do you think that process is going to be in the market?

KATE MOORE: Yeah, well good morning, Julia. So you know I was thinking a little bit about this yesterday, about how the equity market was expecting policy to unravel over the course of 22. And the expectation, I think, that was baked in was slow and steady normalization of monetary policy, accepting the fact that the economy is in excellent shape, that companies and consumers could absorb some slightly higher rates and less liquidity.

But I think what's really happened, not just in the last week, but going into the close of the year, is there has been this rapid recalibration of rate expectations, and that has really shaken the confidence of markets. You've seen those parts of markets that have traded-- trade-- at higher multiples, that are growth year parts of the markets, really de-rate and sell off meaningfully relative to the rest of the market. And

Yet, at the same time, some of those growth year companies that were trading at premium valuations, actually have the best fundamentals. Their earnings outlooks for the course of 2022 are some of the strongest. So you've had this fear and recalibration that the Fed is going to be moving much faster than the equity market participants were looking for at the end of last year. And I think it's led to this unsettled volatility in the market. I expect some of that to wash out over the course of the next month or two, but probably we're in for a little bit of a bumpy ride.

BRIAN SOZZI: Kate, so if confidence has been shaken, to your point, do you buy the dip here?

KATE MOORE: I think it matters what's in the dip, Brian. And this is really important, because there's some stuff that's been sold off more recently where fundamentals don't look as great. And then there are some companies that, as I mentioned before, that have really good earnings profiles, that have really strong free cash flow through the course of this year, but were trading at premium multiples to their peer group, to the other industries, to the rest of the market, and were really suffering from that multiple contraction as the accelerated rate hike cycle gets priced in.