The commonly held perception is that when the Federal Reserve is raising the Fed funds rate, equity returns are lower than when the Fed is easing. It is also a commonly held perception that value sectors, such as Utilities, Energy, Financials. will do better than growth sectors, such as Information Technology and Consumer Discretionary, when the Fed is raising the Fed funds rate. This is because higher interest rates resulting from Fed tightening are thought to have less of an effect on value stocks with their relatively more stable and predictable cash flows than on growth stocks with more distant and less certain cash flows. 

However, market participants should be aware that the relationship between U.S. monetary policy and equity returns is often not straightforward. The headline recognizes that Fed tightening is likely to result in lower stock prices, but that other factors — in this case expected earnings or growth of the economy — may offset the effects of the tighter policy. 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 U.S. market went up 19%.  The converse can also hold. The financial crisis which started in 2007 is an extreme example of the inverse relationship between Fed Reserve policy and equity returns. Between August 2007 and December 2008, the Federal Reserve cut the fed funds rate 8 times from 5.25% to .25%, yet the U.S. stock market fell over 37%.  

Figure 1-4 below shows for each of the four Fed funds rate hikes since 1999 the US sector returns while the Fed was raising the Fed funds rate.   Also next to each of these is the amount that the Fed raised rates. (For the current episode, the Fed is most likely not done will continue raising the Fed funds rate).

  • During the tightening 6/1999 - 05/2000, when the Fed raised rates only 1.5%, the growth sectors, Information Technology and Consumer Discretionary,   had higher returns than the value sectors, Materials and Consumer Staples. For some of this time, the TMT bubble was still holding on. 
  • During the tightening 6/2004 – 6/2006, when the Fed raised rates 4.0%, sector returns went in the opposite direction with value sectors tending to outperform growth sectors.  Energy, Materials, and Financials did better than Information Technology and Consumer Discretionary. 
  • During the 12/2015 – 12/2018 episode, when the Fed Fund rate was raised only 2.0%,   this was reversed with Information Technology and Consumer Discretionary doing better than Consumer Staples, Energy, and Financials.
  •  Starting in 3/2022, in this latest round of Fed tightening where the Fed has raised rates around 3.0% and is still not finished,  value sectors, Energy and Consumer Staples, have fared better than growth sectors, Information Technology and Consumer Discretionary.     

Conclusion:

It appears that the relationship between U.S. monetary policy and sector equity returns is often not straightforward. There does appear to be some relationship between the amount the Fed raises the Fed funds rate and how well the different sectors do – with growth faring worse and value faring better when the Fed has to raise rates agressively to slow the economy and bring down inflation.