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The Fed’s lessons learned from its COVID response

Brij Khurana, Fixed Income Portfolio Manager
6 min read
2025-04-30
Archived info
Archived pieces remain available on the site. Please consider the publish date while reading these older pieces.
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The views expressed are those of the author at the time of writing. Other teams may hold different views and make different investment decisions. The value of your investment may become worth more or less than at the time of original investment. While any third-party data used is considered reliable, its accuracy is not guaranteed. For professional, institutional or accredited investors only.

”Life is a succession of lessons which must be lived to be understood. All is a riddle, and the key to a riddle is another riddle.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson

At its latest meeting, the US Federal Reserve (Fed) board of governors projected 4.7% nominal US growth (2.1% real GDP growth + 2.6% personal consumption expenditures inflation) and an unemployment rate of 4.0% for the balance of 2024. Despite those robust figures, the Fed still expected to lower the policy rate by 75 basis points (bps) this year. While this will likely change given the recent high inflation prints, a divergence remains, with the central bank looking to cut rates and many market commentators wondering what the Fed’s hurry is.

To divine the Fed’s thinking from here, it is worth digging into lessons learned from the pandemic, as these inform its current policy decisions and, as a result, may have meaningful impacts on future stock market performance.

COVID-era policy and subsequent lessons learned

The COVID-19 pandemic and economic shutdown unleashed unprecedented monetary and fiscal stimulus. In its “Statement on the Longer-Run Goals and Monetary Policy Strategy,” the Fed explains its decisions during that historic period. There are two key passages in the statement:

“The Committee judges that the level of the federal funds rate consistent with maximum employment and price stability over the longer run has declined relative to its historical average. Therefore, the federal funds rate is likely to be constrained by its effective lower bound more frequently than in the past. Owing in part to the proximity of interest rates to the effective lower bound, the Committee judges that downward risks to employment and inflation have increased. The Committee is prepared to use its full range of tools to achieve its maximum employment and price stability goals.“

“The inflation rate over the longer run is primarily determined by monetary policy, and hence the Committee has the ability to specify a longer-run goal for inflation.”

Taking these comments together, it is easy to understand why the Fed was so aggressive during the pandemic. The policymakers believed that the neutral rate had decreased over time, and therefore the risk of too little stimulus was greater than the risk of too much stimulus, a view bolstered by the belief that they knew how to solve the main problem caused by overstimulation — high inflation — mainly by raising rates.

The inflation over the past few years has thrown the wisdom of the first part of the Fed’s longer-run goals statement into question, because it made clear that the risk of too little stimulus was, in fact, not greater than the risk of too much stimulus. As inflation toward the end of the pandemic reached levels not seen since the 1970s, the Fed took considerable flak for keeping monetary policy too loose and failing to hike policy rates sooner as the economy revved back up. But while COVID may have busted the myth that high inflation had been permanently beaten, it reinforced the Fed’s other comment that “the inflation rate over the longer run is primarily determined by monetary policy.”

Throughout 2022 and 2023, the Fed assumed the mantle of taming inflation with vigor. Fed Chair Jerome Powell was asked numerous times if fiscal policy was responsible for inflation, and each time, he reiterated that inflation management is solely the Fed’s job and not that of fiscal authorities. The Fed’s conviction was strong enough that it was willing to risk economic recession to bring inflation back to its 2% target.

Recession, so far, has not materialized, and in many ways Powell has turned out to be correct. I do think deficit spending was one of the main reasons for inflation in 2021 – 2022, but it is hard to argue that fiscal spending contracted in 2023. We had a US$1.7 trillion deficit (larger than in 2022), which added approximately 1% to GDP, and yet inflation fell dramatically throughout the year. To the Fed, this has reinforced the idea that monetary policy is restrictive, with the policy rate higher than the neutral rate for the economy.

The other recent formative experience was the Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) crisis that began in March 2023. The potential contagion from this collapse was a real shock to Powell and his team, given that capital in the banking system was robust at the time and the Fed’s balance sheet was still quite large. The Fed reacted by temporarily expanding its balance sheet via the Bank Term Fund Program and yet still hiked interest rates by 75 bps. The success of this approach taught the Fed that a large-scale asset purchase (LSAP) was not necessary to solve a financial crisis.

To summarize the Fed’s lessons learned from the past few years:

  • Lesson #1 — The risk of doing too little stimulus is not greater than doing too much stimulus.
  • Lesson #2 — While the Fed’s balance sheet should be large enough to create an ample reserve regime, targeted use of the balance sheet, rather than LSAPs, can suffice when problems arise.
  • Lesson #3 — Because the neutral rate is probably not much higher than it was before the pandemic, current policy rates are still restrictive, and that is why inflation has eased.

Market implications

The initial implication of Lesson #3 is that policymakers may be wrong about the neutral rate, as former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers has postulated. The thinking here is that despite optically high policy rates, monetary policy is not overly restrictive; therefore, the cycle can continue unabated. Under this view, the Fed pushing back its plans for an interest-rate cut given high recent inflation readings should not matter all that much to the stock market. I believe interpretation is one of the reasons that the US stock market has been so resilient lately, despite the recent increase in interest rates.

As I wrote in my prior piece, I agree with the Fed. I do not think the neutral rate is substantially higher than it was before COVID. I just think the lags to monetary policy are longer, given healthy consumer balance sheets. I do, however, think the market is focusing too much on debating the Fed’s Lesson #3 and not enough on Lessons #1 and #2. Those suggest a more hawkish Fed during the next downturn than what is priced into risk assets today. Markets have been buoyant because they assume the Fed will step in and cut rates when the economy weakens. But I believe the Fed will aim to get closer to the neutral rate (while still being restrictive), as inflation remains well above target. The larger point is that there is no longer an asymmetry in doing too little versus doing too much. During the next downturn, policymakers may be slow to reduce the policy rate and be unlikely to do so with the same magnitude as in prior regimes, given its fear of reigniting inflation, and without resorting to LSAPs.

In my next piece, I will focus more on the Fed’s Lesson #3. While I do think monetary policy is restrictive and the reason inflation has fallen, its dip is the result of a different mechanism than the Fed believes.

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