Traders Need a New Stock Market Playbook for These Rate Cuts

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(Bloomberg) -- Wall Street traders have a unique challenge in placing bets on the stock market now that the Federal Reserve has started cutting interest rates: History is no longer a guide.

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The classic trading playbook for when rates are coming down is to buy stocks in sectors that are considered defensive in nature because their demand is impervious to economic conditions, like consumer staples and health care. Another popular play is shares of industries that pay big dividends, like utilities.

The reason is the Fed typically lowers borrowing costs to fight off a weakening economy or boost one that’s already sunk into a recession. During those periods, companies in growth industries like technology tend to suffer. But that isn’t happening now.

Rather, the economy is growing, equity indexes are hitting all-time highs, corporate earnings are expected to keep expanding, and the Fed just went big with a half-percentage-point rate cut to kick off its easing cycle. There’s no playbook for this.

“With the Fed opting for a jumbo cutting amid quite loose financial conditions, it’s a clear signal for equity investors to position rather offensively,” said Frank Monkam, senior portfolio manager at Antimo. “The traditional play of defensive stocks, such as buy utilities or consumer staples, could fail to see much traction.”

So where are investment pros looking instead?

Financials are a good place to start, according to Walter Todd, president and chief investment officer at Greenwood Capital Associates LLC. He’s snapping up shares of Bank of America Corp., JPMorgan Chase & Co. and regional banks like PNC Financial Services Group Inc.

“This lowering of rates by the Fed should lower their cost of funding,” he said. “They should have to pay less on deposits than they were two days ago, so that should help their net interest margin.”

David Lefkowitz, head of US equities for UBS Global Wealth Management, also likes financials, as well as pockets within the industrial sector closely tied to a strong economy.

No History

That positioning runs counter to what history would suggest. In four cutting cycles over the past three decades investors chased so-called safety stocks, like utilities, consumer staples and health care, that pay hefty dividends and are popular with income investors when bond yields sink, according to data compiled by Strategas Securities.