The Fed is meeting on September 20-21 and is expected to announce its 5th rate hike in this cycle. It is a commonly held perception that when the Federal Reserve is tightening, risk assets, including growth stocks and emerging market equities, suffer. Growth stocks could be affected due to more distant and less certain cash flows on average than the broader market.  Emerging markets are particularly vulnerable to higher U.S. interest rates as cash flows out of emerging markets affecting their equity as well as fixed income markets.  

As we have stated in previous studies, market participants should be aware that the relationship between U.S. monetary policy and equity returns is often not straightforward. For example, between June 2004 and June 2006, the Fed raised the fed funds rate 13 times from 1.00% to 5.25% and the MSCI Emerging Market Index went up 84% on a cumulative basis.  The converse can also hold. The financial crisis which started in 2007 is an extreme example of an inverse relationship between Fed Reserve policy and emerging market equity returns. Between August 2007 and December 2008, the Federal Reserve cut the fed funds rate 8 times from 5.25% to 0.25%, yet the MSCI Emerging Market Index fell over 46% cumulative.  

This analysis explores how growth stocks and emerging market stocks have fared 6 months after the 5th rate hike during the five tightening cycles since 1988, which is when the MSCI Emerging Market Index started.

The figure shows the return 6 months out of the Russell Growth and the MSCI Emerging Market Index after the 5th rate hike. The Russell Growth had positive returns in the following six months 3 times out of the 5 episodes and the MSCI Emerging Market Index had positive returns only in 2 out of the 5 episodes.  The large downdrafts in the MSCI Emerging Market Index during the 1994 and 1999 rate hikes were associated with emerging market currency crises.  It was a period when many emerging market currencies were tied to the US dollar. We would expect this pattern might not repeat following an upcoming 5th fed fund rate hike since most emerging market currencies have become free floating and thus less vulnerable to hikes in U.S. rates.


Investing involves risks and you may incur a profit or a loss. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. There is no assurance that any trend will continue or repeat. Periods shown represent the results of the U.S. Russell 1000 Growth and MSCI Emerging markets for six months following a fifth rate hike (ignoring neutral/hold periods). The five 5-increase cycles presented occurred between March and August of 1988, February and August of 1994, June of 1999 and March of 2000, June and December of 2004, and December of 2015 and December of 2017. Across the six-month periods for which performance is shown the tightening cycles continued, with between 1 and 4 additional fed rate increases during the performance measurement periods shown.


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The Russell 1000 Index measures the performance of the 1,000 largest companies, which represents approximately 92% of equity market capitalization. The Russell 1000 Growth Index measures the performance of those Russell 1000 companies with higher price-to-book ratios and higher forecasted growth values.  Morgan Stanley Capital International (MSCI) indexes are unmanaged market capitalization-weighted indexes. Indices are not available for direct investment. Investment in a security or strategy designed to replicate the performance of an index will incur expenses, such as management fees and transaction costs, which would reduce returns.

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