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It's time someone reminded you what happens to stocks when the Fed raises rates...

Dec 18, 2015, 21:01 IST

Storm clouds pass over the top of the Empire State Building in New York, June 13, 2013.REUTERS/Lucas Jackson

I know, I know, no one likes the bearer of bad news - especially when it comes to stock prices.

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But someone needs to remind you what usually happens to stocks when the Fed raises rates.

So it might as well be me.

If it's any consolation, I own stocks, and I'm not selling them.

So if stock prices do what they usually do when the Fed raises rates, I'll get clobbered, too. Your misery will have company.

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(Why am I not selling? A long story, which I tell in detail here. The short version is that I'm a long-term investor, I'm a taxable investor, I think stocks will eventually recover, I don't know the future - maybe the bulls will be right - I think market-timing is a dumb strategy, I'm mentally prepared for a 50%+ pullback, and I already have a conservative allocation among stocks, bonds, and cash.)

So with that out of the way, here's what usually happens to stock prices when the Fed raises rates:

They drop.

Don't fight the Fed tightening ...

For the past five years, the Fed has been frantically pumping money into the financial markets, keeping interest rates low and encouraging traders to borrow and speculate. This free money, and the resulting speculation, has helped drive stocks to their current levels.

But now the Fed is starting to "take away the punch bowl," as Wall Street is fond of saying.

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Specifically, the Fed is beginning to tighten.

To be sure, for now, monetary policy is still loose. And if you limit your definition of "tightening" to "raising interest rates," the Fed has only just now begun to tighten. But, in the past, it has been the change in direction of Fed money-pumping that has been important to the stock market, not the absolute level.

In the past, major changes in direction of Fed money-pumping have often been followed by changes in direction of stock prices.

Not immediately.

And not always.

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But often.

And the change in direction when the Fed tightens is generally not one that investors enjoy.

Here's a look at the past 50 years. The blue line is the Fed Funds rate (a proxy for the level of Fed money-pumping). The red line is the S&P 500. We'll zoom in on specific periods in a moment. Just note that Fed policy goes through "tightening" and "easing" phases, just as stocks go through bull and bear markets. And sometimes these phases are correlated.

Business Insider, St. Louis Fed

Now let's zoom in. In many of these periods, you'll see that sustained Fed tightening has often been followed by a decline in stock prices. Again, not immediately, and not always, but often. You'll also see that most major declines in stock prices over this period have been preceded by Fed tightening.

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Here's the first period, 1964 to 1980. There were three big tightening phases during this period (blue line) ... and three big stock drops (red line). Good correlation!

Business Insider, St. Louis Fed

Now 1975 to 1982. The Fed started tightening in 1976, at which point the market declined and then flattened for four years. Steeper tightening cycles in 1979 and 1980 were also followed by price drops.

Business Insider, St. Louis Fed

From 1978 to 1990, we see the two drawdowns described above, as well as another tightening cycle followed by flattening stock prices in the late 1980s. Again, tightening precedes crashes.

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Business Insider, St. Louis Fed

And, lastly, 1990 to 2014. For those who want to believe that Fed tightening is irrelevant, there's good news here: A sharp tightening cycle in the mid-1990s did not lead to a crash! Alas, two other tightening cycles, one in 1999 to 2000 and another from 2004 to 2007, were followed by major stock market crashes.

Business Insider, St. Louis Fed

One of the oldest sayings on Wall Street is, "Don't fight the Fed." This saying has meaning in both directions, when the Fed is easing and when it is tightening. A glance at these charts shows why.

On the positive side, the Fed's tightening phases have often lasted a year or two before stock prices peaked and began to drop.

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So even if you're convinced that sustained Fed tightening is now likely to lead to a sharp stock-price pullback at some point, the bull market might still have a ways to run.

SEE ALSO:-BLODGET: This boom will end in a bust-DEAR SILICON VALLEY: Here's your wake-up call-- BLODGET: Yes, you can now call me "Chicken Little" -- But I still think the sky will fall!

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