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With policy remaining too loose, financial conditions will continue to boost the economy and corporate earnings, creating the conditions for a parabolic "melt-up" in risk assets. This trend will likely persist until a breaking point is reached: oil hits $150, the 10-year yield breaks recent highs, or the Fed pivots hawkishly.
On paper, the Fed is shrinking its balance sheet to cool the economy (quantitative tightening). In reality, rate cuts and other channels are injecting liquidity into the financial system faster than it's being removed. This contradictory policy means that despite official tightening, actual liquidity conditions are already easing, fueling asset prices.
The S&P 500 is hitting all-time highs amidst a severe energy crisis because soaring global money supply is overriding fundamental risks. This liquidity floods into financial assets as real economy activity (money velocity) slows, creating a major disconnect between markets and reality.
Governments with massive debt cannot afford to keep interest rates high, as refinancing becomes prohibitively expensive. This forces central banks to lower rates and print money, even when it fuels asset bubbles. The only exits are an unprecedented productivity boom (like from AI) or a devastating economic collapse.
Investors no longer react to underlying economic health but to the anticipated actions of the Federal Reserve. Bad news signals that the Fed will likely inject money into the system to prevent a crash, making asset prices go up. This creates a perverse incentive structure.
Every day the Federal Reserve fails to hike rates, it is effectively easing monetary policy. This inaction allows already loose financial conditions to continue stimulating the economy, creating significant inflationary pressure and pushing the Fed further behind the curve.
The market is focusing on individual positives like earnings growth and Fed easing, but the real story is the reinforcing interplay between deregulation, operating leverage, and accommodative monetary and fiscal policy. This collective impact is being underestimated by investors.
The U.S. is experiencing a rare combination of easing monetary, fiscal, and regulatory policies at the same time. This trifecta of support, typically reserved for dire economic conditions, is creating a favorable environment where markets can run hot and valuations may overshoot their typical levels.
Instead of an imminent collapse, the credit market is likely poised for a final surge in risk-taking. A combination of AI enthusiasm, Fed easing, and fiscal spending will probably drive markets higher and fuel more corporate debt issuance. This growth in leverage will sow the seeds for the eventual downturn.
Despite low unemployment and high inflation, the Fed is cutting rates to preempt a potential job market slowdown. This "run hot" strategy could accelerate an economy already showing signs of heat from high valuations and low credit spreads, creating significant risk.
Current market strength and high valuations are sustained by a powerful, coordinated trifecta of global stimulus. Beyond traditional fiscal and monetary easing, a pro-risk shift in regulation provides a third, often overlooked, tailwind for corporate activity and risk-taking across major economies.