Don’t Let Interest Rate Predictions Dictate Your Investment Decisions

The Smart Investor
07 Mar

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At first glance, it sounded like good news. 

Last Friday, the US labour department said that job growth surged in December, while the unemployment rate was lower than forecasted. 

Curiously, the stock market wasn’t celebrating. 

According to market watchers, a healthy economy could mean fewer interest rate cuts on the horizon — and that’s not good news for Wall Street. 

The market reacted swiftly, plunging last Friday as investors grappled with the implications. 

Sequences like these suggest that interest rate predictions can influence the stock market’s direction. 

Hence, it stands to reason that investors need to pay attention to forecasts or risk finding themselves on the losing end.   

At least, that’s what the market wants you to believe. 

Wrong number, wrong timing, wrong size 

Author and partner at the Collaborative Fund Morgan Housel once quipped that if you read last year’s market predictions, you will never take this year’s predictions seriously. 

Let’s test his theory. 

A little over a year ago, the US Federal Reserve signalled its intention to cut interest rates three times in 2024. 

This commentary sparked a flurry of predictions, with market watchers vying to outguess the Fed on the number, timing, and size of these cuts.  

Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS), for instance, boldly predicted five rate cuts. 

And what did we end up with? 

Just three interest rate cuts in 2024 — a significant miss, to say the least. If interest rate predictions were a baseball game, this would be strike one for the forecasters. 

Next, there is the matter of when the first interest rate cut will happen in 2024: traders anticipated a 73% chance of an interest rate reduction in March. 

In reality, the first interest rate cut only happened in September, six months later.

Again, forecasters must be bitterly disappointed with the outcome. 

That’s strike two.

What about the size of the interest rate cuts?

According to CNBC, the market priced in a 1.5 percentage point reduction in 2024 shortly after the US Federal Reserve commentary. 

The final result? 

A single percentage point cut in 2024, a third lower than the forecast. 

If you have been keeping count, that’s strike three. 

In essence, all three predictions, whether it was the number, timing, and size of the cuts were wildly off the mark — and it’s not even close.

If last Friday’s market reaction was any indication, 2024’s stock market performance must have been a terrible year, marked by one disappointment after another.

Yet, as we now know, the opposite happened. 

The S&P 500 turned in one of its better annual performances last year, rising by over 23%.

Right prediction, wrong outcome

Did the forecasters get anything right? Some did.

According to the Visual Capitalist, four firms, namely Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS), Bank of America (NYSE: BAC), Citigroup (NYSE: C) and Nomura (NYSE: NMR), pencilled in a one percentage point cut for 2024. 

Credit should be given where it’s due: they were right on their forecasts. 

Here’s the rub: did getting these predictions right matter in the end? 

As it turns out, not so much. 

Morgan Stanley, Bank of America and Citi set 2024’s S&P 500 (INDEXSP: .INX) price targets of 4,500, 5,000 and 5,100, respectively, according to Charlie Bilello, Chief Market Strategist at Creative Planning,  

The S&P 500, of course, closed the year at 5,881.

Looking back at the past year’s predictions teaches us three things.

Firstly, you can be correct on your interest rate prediction and yet be wrong on how the market will react to the actual outcome. 

Secondly, there’s a false equivalence drawn between disappointing interest rate predictions and a downturn in the stock market. Media narratives are often created after observing the market reaction. 

Three, predicting the right outcome is not a resource or expertise issue. Banks have both in abundance and yet, they can get it wrong.

Hence, as an individual investor with far fewer resources, we’re better off ignoring these interest rate predictions and, instead, prepare for potential outcomes.   

Right expectations, wrong forecasts 

Forecasts and expectations may look similar but they are different.

My friend Eugene Ng puts it best: forecasts rely on knowing when something will occur. 

Expectations, on the other hand, are the acknowledgement of what’s likely to occur without professing insight into when it will happen.  

For example, it’s reasonable to expect the stock market to fall by 10 per cent or more (termed a market correction) sometime in the future. 

After all, history has shown that corrections are a common occurrence. 

Forecasts, on the other hand, will try to pin this correction to a specific point of time. For example, market analysts often indulge in predicting whether a market correction will happen in 2025. 

Such behaviour can prove costly. 

As an example, the S&P 500 undergoes a market correction once every two years, according to wealth manager Ben Carlson. 

So, you know the odds. 

But there’s an important distinction: knowing the chances of a market downturn does not tell you when it will fall. 

While a market correction has historically occurred roughly once every two years, it does not guarantee that it will turn up like clockwork. In fact, a look at the past reveals long periods of time without a correction.  

For instance, there were no significant pullbacks between 2012 and 2014, a span of three years. 

Hence, if you waited for a correction during this period, you would have sat out of a significant portion of the bull market. 

Get Smart: Predictions don’t count, preparations do

But if predictions are unreliable, what can investors do instead?

Forecasts are popular because they seem to remove a key source of investor anxiety: the uncertainty over what will happen next. 

However, the key is to identify the roots of your fear, in my view. 

If your anxiety stems from the daily market fluctuations, consider removing the daily stock price change column from your portfolio. This metric should have no bearing on your investment decisions anyway. 

If your fear comes from the potential lack of funds, there is nothing wrong in taking some money off the table if it puts your mind at ease. Alternatively, if regular dividends provide comfort, consider increasing your allocation to income stocks to boost your passive income.

Here’s the thing: if uncertainty is the only certainty in the future, then having a calm mind is an underrated factor. 

As Morgan Housel points out, Napoleon defined military genius as the man who can do the average thing when everyone else around him is losing his mind. 

The same principle applies to investing.  

In my eyes, calmness can be achieved by having the right expectations, and preparing well for any market turbulence even when we don’t know when the market will fall. 

If you are prepared, you will have less worries. 

If you worry less, you will stand a better chance of doing better than average. And that’s more than any investor can hope for, whether the forecasts are right or wrong.

If you’re nervous, confused, or worried about buying your first stock, then our latest beginner’s guide to investing can help. It’s easy to read yet packed with valuable insights. Download it for free today, and buy your first stock in the next few hours. Click here to get started.

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Disclosure: Chin Hui Leong does not own any of the shares mentioned.

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Disclaimer: Investing carries risk. This is not financial advice. The above content should not be regarded as an offer, recommendation, or solicitation on acquiring or disposing of any financial products, any associated discussions, comments, or posts by author or other users should not be considered as such either. It is solely for general information purpose only, which does not consider your own investment objectives, financial situations or needs. TTM assumes no responsibility or warranty for the accuracy and completeness of the information, investors should do their own research and may seek professional advice before investing.

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