Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R....
-
Upload
gwen-lester -
Category
Documents
-
view
214 -
download
0
Transcript of Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R....
![Page 1: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes
CFA Society HoustonWednesday, April 8, 2015
Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., [email protected]
![Page 2: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/2.jpg)
We are living in unusual times….
![Page 3: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/3.jpg)
Since 1950, the 3-month rate has been below 1% only 99 times. 22 times previously 77 times in the past 6 1/2 years
Since 1950, the 3-month rate has been below 0.75% only 79 times. 2 times previously 77 times in the past 6 1/2 years
Time Frame Average
10 years 1.39%
20 years 2.59%
30 years 3.64%
40 years 4.91%
50 years 5.03%
Click icon to add picture
![Page 4: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/4.jpg)
FOMC StatementSeptember 17, 2014
The Committee will determine the timing and pace of policy normalization-- meaning steps to raise the federal funds rate and other short-term interest rates to more normal levels…
![Page 5: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/5.jpg)
FOMC StatementOctober 29, 2014December 17, 2014January 28, 2015March 18, 2015
The Committee currently anticipates that, even after employment and inflation are near mandate-consistent levels, economic conditions may, for some time, warrant keeping the target federal funds rate below levels the Committee views as normal in the longer run.
![Page 6: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/6.jpg)
WHEN?
![Page 7: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/7.jpg)
Three Steps and a…
![Page 8: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/8.jpg)
Stumble
![Page 9: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/9.jpg)
Gould’s rule
The market will suffer a substantial downturn after the Federal Reserve raises rates three consecutive times
George Schade (1991) Early warning signal Markets tend to advance for six more months Expect bottom 18 months after signal
![Page 10: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/10.jpg)
Recessions have been preceded by increases in discount rate
![Page 11: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/11.jpg)
![Page 12: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/12.jpg)
Gould’s rule
![Page 13: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/13.jpg)
Gould’s rule--1994
![Page 14: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/14.jpg)
Gould’s rule--2000
![Page 15: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/15.jpg)
Gould’s rule--2004
![Page 16: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/16.jpg)
Cyclical Investing and TradingJim Cramer’s Mad Money
0%
1%
2%
3%
GDP growth
1st rate1st rate hike
2nd rate hike
3rd rate hike
4th rate hike
1st Fed easing
buy financials
buy metals and minerals
buy medicine and supermarketsell financials
![Page 17: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/17.jpg)
Do some sectors provide protection from the stumble?
Daily returns since July, 1926Kenneth R. FrenchDartmouth Collegehttp://mba.tuck.dartmouth.edu/pages/faculty/ken.french/data_library.html
FoodMining and MineralsOil and PetroleumClothing and TextilesConsumer DurablesChemicalsConsumer ConstructionSteelFabricated ProductsMachinery and Business EquipCarsTransportationUtilitiesRetail StoresFinancialOther
![Page 18: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/18.jpg)
Food Mines Oil Clths Durbl Chems Cnsum Cnstr Steel FabPr Machn Cars Trans Utils Rtail Finan Other10-day pre -0.1128 0.0707 -0.0940 -0.1093 -0.0546 -0.0631 0.0161 -0.0264 -0.0699 -0.0560 -0.0532 -0.1609 -0.0529 -0.0207 -0.0967 -0.0588 -0.05885-day pre -0.1712 0.0044 -0.2235 -0.2017 -0.2380 -0.1194 -0.0263 -0.1157 -0.1352 -0.1848 -0.1633 -0.1968 -0.1251 -0.1043 -0.1662 -0.1682 -0.16535-day post 0.0813 0.1876 0.0372 -0.0506 0.0424 0.0372 0.0599 0.0918 0.1339 -0.0240 0.1202 0.0492 0.0977 0.0379 0.1212 0.0149 0.106710-day post 0.0313 0.0622 0.0467 -0.0667 -0.0308 0.0340 0.0526 0.0863 0.1620 0.0597 0.0989 0.0200 0.0524 0.0386 0.0297 0.0323 0.087430-day post 0.0514 -0.0214 0.0044 0.0122 0.0120 0.0165 0.0223 0.0431 0.0335 0.0330 0.0589 -0.0146 0.0111 -0.0131 0.0217 0.0192 0.047860-day post 0.0734 0.0040 0.0545 0.0685 0.0798 0.0769 0.0774 0.0937 0.0848 0.0859 0.0852 0.0640 0.0622 0.0490 0.0796 0.0951 0.064590-day post 0.0774 0.0293 0.0549 0.0604 0.0835 0.0728 0.0794 0.0758 0.0876 0.0787 0.0776 0.0389 0.0568 0.0356 0.0804 0.0859 0.0624120-day post 0.0628 0.0192 0.0453 0.0451 0.0469 0.0692 0.0685 0.0585 0.0679 0.0611 0.0636 0.0220 0.0411 0.0396 0.0576 0.0707 0.0512
Mean returns around Gould’s three-step signal
Stumbling before the step Negative returns precede third rate hike
Predominantly positive results following hike
![Page 19: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/19.jpg)
Mean returns around Gould’s three-step signal
Annualized—Assuming 250 trading days
Food Mines Oil Clths Durbl Chems Cnsum Cnstr Steel FabPr Machn Cars Trans Utils Rtail Finan Other10-day pre -24.58 19.33 -20.95 -23.93 -12.77 -14.60 4.12 -6.39 -16.04 -13.07 -12.46 -33.14 -12.40 -5.05 -21.49 -13.67 -13.685-day pre -34.84 1.11 -42.85 -39.64 -44.88 -25.82 -6.37 -25.14 -28.70 -37.03 -33.54 -38.89 -26.87 -22.97 -34.02 -34.34 -33.885-day post 22.54 59.77 9.74 -11.88 11.17 9.76 16.15 25.79 39.71 -5.81 35.02 13.08 27.65 9.93 35.38 3.79 30.5510-day post 8.13 16.81 12.39 -15.35 -7.42 8.88 14.06 24.05 49.89 16.10 28.02 5.12 14.00 10.12 7.70 8.40 24.4030-day post 13.70 -5.22 1.11 3.11 3.06 4.22 5.73 11.37 8.74 8.61 15.85 -3.58 2.82 -3.22 5.59 4.91 12.6960-day post 20.12 0.99 14.60 18.66 22.07 21.20 21.35 26.39 23.60 23.94 23.74 17.34 16.81 13.03 21.99 26.84 17.4990-day post 21.35 7.60 14.71 16.30 23.20 19.95 21.94 20.84 24.46 21.72 21.41 10.22 15.25 9.32 22.25 23.96 16.86120-day post 16.99 4.91 11.98 11.93 12.45 18.87 18.66 15.76 18.49 16.48 17.24 5.67 10.82 10.41 15.49 19.33 13.64
![Page 20: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/20.jpg)
Median returns around Gould’s three-step signal
Food Mines Oil Clths Durbl Chems Cnsum Cnstr Steel FabPr Machn Cars Trans Utils Rtail Finan Other10-day pre -0.1063 0.0920 -0.1539 -0.1007 0.0396 -0.1275 -0.0170 -0.0497 -0.1384 -0.0166 -0.1346 -0.2567 -0.1516 -0.0797 -0.0506 -0.1031 -0.10335-day pre -0.2063 -0.1429 -0.2192 -0.2069 -0.1611 -0.1314 0.0156 -0.0861 -0.0961 -0.1217 -0.1507 -0.1987 -0.1025 -0.0947 -0.1939 -0.1312 -0.11685-day post 0.1072 0.2811 0.1048 -0.0220 0.0178 0.2011 0.0997 0.1874 0.1797 0.0817 0.1456 0.2111 0.2805 0.0359 0.0988 -0.0031 0.077910-day post 0.0684 0.1879 0.0202 0.0029 -0.0054 0.0424 0.1102 0.1015 0.1150 0.0133 0.0899 0.1190 0.1899 0.0649 -0.0002 0.1090 0.088730-day post 0.0467 -0.0326 0.0046 -0.0437 0.0012 0.0093 -0.0059 0.0538 -0.0114 -0.0323 0.0232 -0.0032 0.0345 0.0171 -0.0116 -0.0094 0.060160-day post 0.0506 0.0207 0.0602 0.1155 0.0817 0.0540 0.0803 0.0811 0.0691 0.0672 0.0566 0.0196 0.0775 0.0131 0.0393 0.0947 0.071590-day post 0.1010 0.0140 0.0766 0.0897 0.0677 0.0769 0.0412 0.0866 0.1069 0.0648 0.0739 -0.0046 0.0713 0.0138 0.0569 0.0721 0.0725120-day post 0.0821 0.0098 0.0804 0.0519 0.0617 0.0894 0.0636 0.0839 0.0840 0.0598 0.0695 0.0161 0.0719 0.0224 0.0384 0.1010 0.0479
![Page 21: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/21.jpg)
Median returns around Gould’s three-step signal
Annualized—Assuming 250 trading days
Food Mines Oil Clths Durbl Chems Cnsum Cnstr Steel FabPr Machn Cars Trans Utils Rtail Finan Other10-day pre -23.35 25.85 -31.96 -22.27 10.40 -27.31 -4.16 -11.70 -29.27 -4.05 -28.59 -47.40 -31.57 -18.07 -11.89 -22.74 -22.775-day pre -40.32 -30.06 -42.22 -40.42 -33.17 -28.01 3.96 -19.36 -21.37 -26.25 -31.41 -39.19 -22.61 -21.10 -38.44 -27.98 -25.335-day post 30.70 101.73 29.94 -5.36 4.55 65.23 28.28 59.69 56.66 22.66 43.85 69.41 101.40 9.39 27.99 -0.78 21.5110-day post 18.65 59.89 5.19 0.73 -1.33 11.19 31.71 28.86 33.28 3.39 25.20 34.62 60.68 17.62 -0.05 31.31 24.8230-day post 12.39 -7.83 1.17 -10.36 0.29 2.36 -1.46 14.39 -2.81 -7.75 5.97 -0.80 9.00 4.36 -2.85 -2.31 16.2160-day post 13.48 5.32 16.25 33.44 22.65 14.45 22.22 22.47 18.84 18.28 15.20 5.01 21.38 3.33 10.32 26.69 19.5690-day post 28.72 3.55 21.08 25.14 18.43 21.18 10.84 24.16 30.63 17.57 20.28 -1.15 19.49 3.51 15.29 19.76 19.88120-day post 22.77 2.48 22.25 13.84 16.69 25.03 17.23 23.32 23.37 16.13 18.98 4.11 19.69 5.76 10.07 28.71 12.72
![Page 22: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/22.jpg)
Financial Sector
10-day pre 5-day pre 5-day post 10-day post 30-day post 60-day post 90-day post 120-day postJuly 7, 1928 -0.2823 -0.7863 -0.0031 0.1800 0.0904 0.1574 0.2407 0.2146
May 1, 1937 -0.5380 -0.1422 -0.1714 -0.6842 -0.1946 0.0836 -0.1166 -0.2740Jan. 21, 1946 0.3097 0.2214 0.5389 0.4982 -0.1221 0.0666 0.0424 0.0112Aug. 13, 1948 -0.1466 -0.3374 0.3277 0.1402 -0.0502 0.0259 0.0113 0.0155Sept. 9, 1955 0.2636 0.1215 -0.1621 0.0225 -0.2447 -0.0143 -0.0429 0.0068
March 3, 1959 0.1890 0.0718 0.1857 -0.0881 -0.0373 -0.0220 0.0245 0.0163Dec. 6, 1965 0.1697 0.1835 0.3353 0.1493 0.0901 -0.0490 -0.0293 -0.0635
Apr. 19, 1968 0.5678 0.4252 0.6302 0.5040 0.3754 0.3172 0.2900 0.2853May 1, 1973 -0.6867 -0.9134 0.4304 -0.2117 -0.0606 0.1341 0.0721 0.1010Jan. 9, 1978 -0.2317 -0.7798 -0.1862 -0.0132 -0.0094 0.0947 0.2011 0.1263Dec. 5, 1980 -0.1428 -0.2489 -0.1758 0.5318 0.1801 0.1257 0.1509 0.1391
Jan. 24, 1989 -0.1031 -0.2120 0.2673 0.2344 0.2119 0.2038 0.1626 0.1885Nov., 15, 1994 -0.1275 -0.0986 -1.0017 -0.2911 -0.0523 0.1173 0.1144 0.1270
Feb. 2, 2000 -0.0539 0.1039 -0.7184 -0.5974 0.0711 0.0477 0.1034 0.1031Sept. 21, 2004 -0.0689 -0.1312 -0.0738 0.1090 0.0399 0.1383 0.0645 0.0633
![Page 23: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/23.jpg)
Financial SectorAnnualized—assuming 250 trading days
10-day pre 5-day pre 5-day post 10-day post 30-day post 60-day post 90-day post 120-day postJuly 7, 1928 -50.68 -86.10 -0.78 56.78 25.34 48.18 82.42 70.92
May 1, 1937 -74.04 -29.94 -34.87 -82.03 -38.55 23.22 -25.29 -49.63Jan. 21, 1946 116.65 73.82 283.26 246.43 -26.31 18.12 11.17 2.85
Aug. 13, 1948 -30.70 -57.04 126.58 41.96 -11.79 6.69 2.86 3.95Sept. 9, 1955 93.10 35.47 -33.34 5.79 -45.81 -3.52 -10.16 1.70
March 3, 1959 60.35 19.65 59.03 -19.77 -8.91 -5.34 6.31 4.15Dec. 6, 1265 52.80 58.15 130.90 45.21 25.26 -11.53 -7.07 -14.68
Apr. 19, 1968 311.83 188.87 380.93 251.41 155.16 120.71 106.26 103.86May 1, 1973 -82.14 -89.91 192.65 -41.13 -14.07 39.81 19.76 28.71Jan. 9, 1978 -44.00 -85.87 -37.25 -3.25 -2.31 26.69 65.24 37.09Dec. 5, 1980 -30.05 -46.37 -35.58 276.57 56.79 36.89 45.79 41.55
Jan. 24, 1989 -22.74 -41.17 94.91 79.57 69.74 66.37 50.10 60.12Nov., 15, 1994 -27.31 -21.85 -91.93 -51.75 -12.27 34.07 33.09 37.35
Feb. 2, 2000 -12.61 29.65 -83.51 -77.64 19.44 12.65 29.47 29.38Sept. 21, 2004 -15.83 -27.98 -16.85 31.31 10.47 41.28 17.50 17.13
![Page 24: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/24.jpg)
Financial Sector
![Page 25: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/25.jpg)
Food: meat, dairy, bakery products, beverages, candy
10-day pre 5-day pre 5-day post 10-day post 30-day post 60-day post 90-day post 120-day post
July 7, 1928 -0.1653 -0.5706 -0.0333 0.1170 0.1417 0.2007 0.1391 0.1185May 1, 1937 -0.5132 -0.0628 0.1610 -0.4316 -0.0415 -0.0116 -0.0211 -0.1494
Jan. 21, 1946 0.1382 -0.2063 0.1838 0.2058 -0.0986 0.0825 0.0646 0.0227Aug. 13, 1948 -0.1063 -0.2479 0.2492 0.1031 -0.1389 -0.0424 -0.0506 -0.0118Sept. 9, 1955 0.1107 0.1316 -0.1141 -0.0322 -0.1413 0.0015 -0.0166 0.0090
March 3, 1959 0.1997 0.2197 0.2656 -0.0009 0.0467 0.0762 0.0625 0.0630Dec. 6, 1265 -0.0403 -0.0282 0.0596 0.0684 0.0933 -0.0260 -0.0223 -0.0526
Apr. 19, 1968 0.5434 0.3714 0.4833 0.5024 0.2911 0.1032 0.1088 0.0992May 1, 1973 -0.4476 -0.4844 0.4303 -0.0526 0.0850 0.0377 0.0185 0.0431Jan. 9, 1978 -0.1523 -0.5426 -0.1341 -0.0445 -0.0028 0.0355 0.1531 0.1047Dec. 5, 1980 -0.1916 -0.1638 -0.3104 0.1114 0.2695 0.1922 0.2052 0.1654
Jan. 24, 1989 -0.0745 -0.2101 0.3613 0.3009 0.2800 0.3018 0.2111 0.2245Nov., 15, 1994 0.1637 0.2910 -0.3984 -0.2807 -0.0228 0.0506 0.1020 0.1129
Feb. 2, 2000 -0.7220 -0.6275 0.1072 -0.2518 -0.1059 -0.0575 0.1010 0.1106Sept. 21, 2004 -0.4341 -0.4369 -0.0909 0.1545 0.1149 0.1560 0.1062 0.0821
![Page 26: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/26.jpg)
Mines: metal mining, gold, silver, iron, and copper ores
10-day pre 5-day pre 5-day post 10-day post 30-day post 60-day post 90-day post 120-day post
July 7, 1928 -0.0780 -0.7240 -0.0176 -0.0641 -0.0326 0.1621 0.1310 0.1146
May 1, 1937 -0.7852 -0.3991 0.2811 -0.5323 0.0060 0.0809 0.0379 -0.1508
Jan. 21, 1946 0.1888 -0.1761 0.4353 0.4850 0.0059 0.0769 0.0587 0.0261
Aug. 13, 1948 -0.2593 -0.5784 0.0802 0.2035 -0.0765 0.0207 0.0019 0.0051
Sept. 9, 1955 0.2291 0.0213 -0.1756 -0.0804 -0.2645 0.0178 -0.0326 0.0651
March 3, 1959 -0.0192 0.2054 0.5051 0.1879 0.0463 -0.0581 -0.0108 -0.0001
Dec. 6, 1265 0.0920 0.1366 0.4417 0.2592 0.3924 0.2965 0.2314 0.1103
Apr. 19, 1968 0.5057 0.4993 0.6952 0.3506 0.3065 0.0449 0.0140 0.0098
May 1, 1973 -0.2401 -0.5636 0.5310 0.2556 -0.0643 0.1386 0.1152 0.1861
Jan. 9, 1978 0.1226 -0.1429 -0.0401 -0.0052 -0.1226 -0.0160 0.0924 0.0221
Dec. 5, 1980 0.3507 0.5294 -1.1286 -0.3229 -0.3857 -0.3142 -0.0287 -0.0438
Jan. 24, 1989 0.3146 0.7071 -0.1165 -0.0675 -0.1096 -0.1572 -0.0311 -0.0136
Nov., 15, 1994 -0.4068 -0.4670 -0.9494 -0.5900 -0.1331 -0.1428 -0.0047 0.0012
Feb. 2, 2000 1.1652 1.2947 1.5503 0.2681 0.0733 -0.2453 -0.2166 -0.1888
Sept. 21, 2004 -0.1197 -0.2765 0.7220 0.5849 0.0370 0.1544 0.0817 0.1444
![Page 27: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/27.jpg)
Oil: oil and gas extraction, petroleum refining
10-day pre 5-day pre 5-day post 10-day post 30-day post 60-day post 90-day post 120-day post
July 7, 1928 -0.1539 -0.7195 -0.1554 -0.0320 0.1314 0.1854 0.1629 0.1595May 1, 1937 -0.4904 0.5791 -0.0530 -0.5121 -0.0461 0.0602 0.0194 -0.1702
Jan. 21, 1946 -0.1797 -0.3807 -0.3703 0.0325 -0.1573 0.1227 0.1631 0.1057Aug. 13, 1948 -0.0092 -0.4627 0.2291 -0.0846 -0.2753 -0.0277 -0.0555 -0.0475Sept. 9, 1955 0.2128 0.2478 0.3003 0.2670 -0.1013 0.1094 0.0766 0.1321
March 3, 1959 0.3361 0.9241 0.1048 -0.1173 0.0901 -0.0227 -0.0561 -0.0234Dec. 6, 1265 -0.1394 -0.1501 0.2095 0.0202 0.1174 -0.0581 -0.0065 -0.0250
Apr. 19, 1968 0.1594 -0.0420 0.4835 0.4475 0.1739 0.2001 0.1672 0.1570May 1, 1973 -0.2178 -0.7733 0.6024 -0.2513 0.0046 0.0100 -0.0284 0.0804Jan. 9, 1978 -0.2618 -0.9895 -0.2251 -0.1042 0.0136 0.0372 0.1445 0.0502Dec. 5, 1980 -0.3359 -1.2560 -0.0184 0.4723 -0.1244 -0.1636 -0.2014 -0.1953
Jan. 24, 1989 -0.0456 -0.0565 0.5801 0.3683 0.1292 0.1535 0.1049 0.1119Nov., 15, 1994 -0.2893 -0.3786 -0.3092 -0.1451 -0.0684 -0.0092 0.0704 0.1041
Feb. 2, 2000 -0.3421 -0.2192 -1.0921 0.0215 0.1909 0.1323 0.1793 0.0408Sept. 21, 2004 0.3467 0.3239 0.2718 0.3182 -0.0120 0.0883 0.0834 0.1990
![Page 28: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/28.jpg)
Clothing: yarn and thread mills, apparel, footwear, floor covering
10-day pre 5-day pre 5-day post 10-day post 30-day post 60-day post 90-day post 120-day post
July 7, 1928 -0.2237 -0.4456 -0.1809 -0.0958 -0.0437 0.0415 0.0583 0.0519May 1, 1937 -0.5782 -0.1895 -0.0220 -0.4684 -0.1270 -0.0600 -0.0273 -0.1829
Jan. 21, 1946 0.2308 -0.1206 0.6552 0.4437 -0.1350 0.1155 0.1591 0.0933Aug. 13, 1948 -0.1931 -0.3975 0.1679 0.1218 -0.1487 -0.0718 -0.1125 -0.0599Sept. 9, 1955 0.1846 0.3055 -0.0260 0.0029 -0.1475 -0.0194 -0.0336 -0.0220
March 3, 1959 0.1467 -0.0182 0.0620 -0.0364 0.0705 0.0772 0.1009 0.0761Dec. 6, 1265 0.2706 0.1695 0.1635 0.1724 0.2167 0.1166 0.0897 -0.0068
Apr. 19, 1968 0.6313 0.5076 0.7888 0.6041 0.3681 0.1611 0.1790 0.1709May 1, 1973 -0.6072 -0.6075 0.5121 -0.1953 -0.3048 -0.0930 -0.1270 -0.0324Jan. 9, 1978 -0.2410 -0.6774 -0.0644 0.0781 0.0466 0.1305 0.2162 0.1257Dec. 5, 1980 -0.3737 -0.2998 -0.8178 -0.2449 0.1817 0.1874 0.2295 0.1744
Jan. 24, 1989 0.0626 -0.3402 0.5619 0.3366 0.1640 0.1562 0.1171 0.1661Nov., 15, 1994 -0.1007 -0.2069 -0.4327 -0.2760 -0.0871 -0.0425 -0.0399 -0.0228
Feb. 2, 2000 -0.8107 -0.6792 -2.0803 -1.5626 -0.0555 0.1283 -0.0173 0.0202Sept. 21, 2004 -0.0381 -0.0265 -0.0460 0.1198 0.1854 0.1994 0.1144 0.1248
![Page 29: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/29.jpg)
Durables: household furniture and appliances, musical instruments, toys, jewelry
10-day pre 5-day pre 5-day post 10-day post 30-day post 60-day post 90-day post 120-day post
July 7, 1928 0.0556 -0.8425 -0.0667 -0.2099 -0.0216 0.2529 0.2779 0.2052May 1, 1937 -0.7934 -0.3854 -0.1382 -0.8210 0.0318 0.0712 0.0246 -0.2579
Jan. 21, 1946 0.2084 -0.0930 0.5128 0.6354 -0.0784 0.1462 0.1194 0.0611Aug. 13, 1948 -0.1090 -0.4320 0.3015 0.1331 -0.0779 -0.0190 -0.0491 -0.0471Sept. 9, 1955 0.2314 -0.2371 0.0178 -0.0054 -0.2042 -0.0417 -0.0803 -0.0096
March 3, 1959 0.4195 0.3898 0.4716 0.2231 0.2396 0.2345 0.1955 0.1391Dec. 6, 1265 0.0507 -0.0646 0.3164 0.1003 0.2467 0.0817 0.1774 0.0947
Apr. 19, 1968 0.5842 0.2453 0.6101 0.5142 0.2704 -0.0413 0.0331 0.0457May 1, 1973 -0.6106 -0.8549 0.5591 -0.2579 0.0012 0.1016 -0.0181 0.0166Jan. 9, 1978 -0.2720 -0.6885 -0.3027 -0.3100 -0.1663 -0.0164 0.1844 0.1144Dec. 5, 1980 -0.2830 -0.1611 -0.3122 -0.0691 0.0475 0.1499 0.1804 0.1181
Jan. 24, 1989 0.1117 -0.0133 0.1526 0.1946 0.0622 0.1165 0.1035 0.1305Nov., 15, 1994 -0.1016 -0.0350 -0.8635 -0.4229 -0.1305 0.0303 0.0653 0.0824
Feb. 2, 2000 -0.3511 -0.3952 -0.4920 -0.4008 -0.0866 -0.0354 -0.0291 -0.0507Sept. 21, 2004 0.0396 -0.0018 -0.1312 0.2340 0.0468 0.1660 0.0677 0.0617
![Page 30: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/30.jpg)
Chemicals: plastic material, synthetic resin, agricultural chemicals
10-day pre 5-day pre 5-day post 10-day post 30-day post 60-day post 90-day post 120-day post
July 7, 1928 -0.1783 -0.6827 0.0844 0.1986 0.1495 0.2068 0.2431 0.2355May 1, 1937 -0.3393 0.2361 0.2011 -0.2213 0.0477 0.0623 0.0459 -0.1086
Jan. 21, 1946 0.1046 -0.1866 0.3136 0.5592 -0.0170 0.1605 0.1301 0.0941Aug. 13, 1948 -0.0762 -0.2734 0.4291 0.2184 -0.0665 0.0333 0.0097 0.0416Sept. 9, 1955 0.4363 0.3608 0.2256 0.0424 -0.2175 0.0100 -0.0338 0.0221
March 3, 1959 0.6342 0.4895 0.3855 0.0780 0.1297 0.1963 0.1298 0.1022Dec. 6, 1265 -0.1024 -0.0502 -0.0156 0.0417 0.0737 -0.0678 -0.0588 -0.0865
Apr. 19, 1968 0.7639 0.3963 0.1098 0.0944 0.0093 0.0012 0.0597 0.0894May 1, 1973 -0.4391 -0.5296 0.7245 -0.0674 -0.0217 0.0540 0.0412 0.1395Jan. 9, 1978 -0.3817 -1.0169 -0.2044 -0.1290 -0.1363 -0.0114 0.1409 0.0534Dec. 5, 1980 -0.3559 -0.2634 -0.5339 -0.0280 0.1161 0.1357 0.1070 0.0603
Jan. 24, 1989 -0.1275 -0.1314 0.2549 0.2008 0.1204 0.1563 0.0769 0.1404Nov., 15, 1994 -0.2283 -0.1828 -0.9585 -0.3094 -0.0087 0.0252 0.0865 0.1199
Feb. 2, 2000 -0.5500 -0.0739 -0.8695 -0.6304 -0.0593 -0.0511 -0.0266 -0.0635Sept. 21, 2004 -0.1065 0.1173 0.4121 0.4626 0.1284 0.2428 0.1403 0.1979
![Page 31: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/31.jpg)
Consumer Goods: tobacco products, drugs, soaps, perfumes
10-day pre 5-day pre 5-day post 10-day post 30-day post 60-day post 90-day post 120-day post
July 7, 1928 0.0569 0.0156 -0.0908 0.1660 0.0704 0.1567 0.1432 0.1378May 1, 1937 -0.2183 0.0520 0.0997 -0.1762 -0.0228 -0.0178 0.0156 -0.0826
Jan. 21, 1946 0.1373 -0.1588 0.3731 0.0125 -0.2100 0.0946 0.1594 0.0686Aug. 13, 1948 -0.0170 -0.1671 0.2076 0.1016 -0.1213 -0.0318 -0.0189 0.0097Sept. 9, 1955 0.1357 0.1415 0.1458 0.1446 -0.0810 0.0803 0.0368 0.0636
March 3, 1959 0.4922 0.3154 0.0677 0.1770 0.2508 0.1297 0.1516 0.1107Dec. 6, 1265 0.2058 0.2096 0.2178 0.1968 0.1566 -0.0011 0.0349 -0.0249
Apr. 19, 1968 0.5486 0.3751 0.5007 0.3981 0.1674 0.0400 0.0377 0.0446May 1, 1973 -0.3858 -0.7340 0.5393 -0.0782 0.1007 0.1193 -0.0711 -0.0079Jan. 9, 1978 -0.2578 -0.7564 -0.0783 0.1320 -0.0173 0.0371 0.1914 0.1305Dec. 5, 1980 -0.1820 -0.1639 -0.3470 0.1102 0.2414 0.1728 0.1868 0.1526
Jan. 24, 1989 -0.0714 -0.2173 0.2790 0.2999 0.2459 0.2780 0.1642 0.2234Nov., 15, 1994 0.2019 0.4006 -0.5600 -0.0910 -0.0059 0.0883 0.1287 0.1148
Feb. 2, 2000 -0.2378 0.6832 -0.3405 -0.4640 -0.2307 -0.0074 0.0412 0.0581Sept. 21, 2004 -0.1659 -0.3905 -0.1153 -0.1399 -0.2101 0.0229 -0.0107 0.0280
![Page 32: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/32.jpg)
Construction: forestry, building contractors, paints, paving and roofing
materials, hand tools
10-day pre 5-day pre 5-day post 10-day post 30-day post 60-day post 90-day post 120-day post
July 7, 1928 -0.0993 -0.6848 -0.0906 0.1044 0.0753 0.1528 0.1600 0.1776May 1, 1937 -0.5797 0.0514 0.5020 -0.2931 0.0144 0.0178 0.0283 -0.2255
Jan. 21, 1946 0.2049 -0.0994 0.5352 0.5775 0.0641 0.2065 0.1569 0.0928Aug. 13, 1948 -0.0497 -0.3297 0.3353 0.2271 -0.1044 0.0120 -0.0198 0.0084Sept. 9, 1955 0.3943 0.2890 0.3014 0.3452 -0.1430 0.0362 -0.0382 0.0401
March 3, 1959 0.2873 0.1376 0.1778 0.0991 0.0538 0.1014 0.0866 0.0625Dec. 6, 1265 0.0067 -0.0861 0.1874 0.1445 0.2049 0.0594 0.0490 -0.0316
Apr. 19, 1968 0.7917 0.2225 0.5651 0.4963 0.3246 0.1325 0.2000 0.1566May 1, 1973 -0.4342 -0.4739 0.4824 -0.1897 -0.1592 0.0793 0.0476 0.1140Jan. 9, 1978 -0.2227 -0.7914 -0.2445 -0.0295 0.0091 0.1006 0.2258 0.1439Dec. 5, 1980 -0.2457 -0.3977 -0.5095 -0.0141 0.0499 0.0811 0.1104 0.0839
Jan. 24, 1989 -0.0268 -0.0129 0.3430 0.3010 0.1006 0.1531 0.1152 0.1578Nov., 15, 1994 -0.0882 -0.1035 -0.8884 -0.2531 -0.0687 0.0500 0.0192 0.0335
Feb. 2, 2000 -0.3617 0.5518 -0.4650 -0.3233 0.0618 0.0010 -0.1548 -0.0561Sept. 21, 2004 0.0268 -0.0092 0.1457 0.1015 0.1634 0.2221 0.1501 0.1202
![Page 33: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/33.jpg)
Steel: iron and steel foundries
10-day pre 5-day pre 5-day post 10-day post 30-day post 60-day post 90-day post 120-day post
July 7, 1928 -0.1544 -0.5308 0.0661 0.2064 0.2141 0.2969 0.2811 0.2544May 1, 1937 -0.7422 -0.0512 0.2437 -0.6902 0.0674 0.1413 0.1145 -0.2165
Jan. 21, 1946 0.1222 -0.4348 0.4982 0.7634 -0.0405 0.0860 0.0835 0.0476
Aug. 13, 1948 -0.1384 -0.6643 0.5939 0.2839 -0.0732 0.0639 -0.0108 -0.0159Sept. 9, 1955 0.5697 0.7261 0.1245 0.1150 -0.3276 -0.0173 -0.0698 0.0189
March 3, 1959 0.3167 0.0759 0.4552 0.0913 0.0217 0.0605 0.1069 0.0840Dec. 6, 1265 -0.1090 -0.0961 0.1797 0.5978 0.4058 0.1322 0.1353 0.0169
Apr. 19, 1968 0.5785 0.5830 0.1796 0.3090 0.3038 0.0208 0.0656 0.0881May 1, 1973 -0.3161 -0.2985 0.4033 -0.2605 -0.1355 -0.0413 0.0092 0.1337Jan. 9, 1978 -0.0736 -0.5251 0.0442 0.0933 -0.1441 0.0411 0.1594 0.0587Dec. 5, 1980 -0.3116 0.0053 -0.7220 -0.2270 -0.0242 0.1442 0.2455 0.1704
Jan. 24, 1989 -0.1870 -0.0007 0.3354 0.0721 -0.0116 0.0691 -0.0090 0.0920Nov., 15, 1994 -0.3265 -0.3667 -0.9213 -0.3588 -0.0114 -0.0512 -0.0411 -0.0166
Feb. 2, 2000 -0.1621 -0.4437 -0.3103 0.6299 0.1823 0.1381 0.1335 0.1557Sept. 21, 2004 -0.1146 -0.0067 0.8376 0.8051 0.0760 0.1878 0.1095 0.1469
![Page 34: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/34.jpg)
Fabricated Products: metal cans, shipping containers,
sheet metal work
10-day pre 5-day pre 5-day post 10-day post 30-day post 60-day post 90-day post 120-day post
July 7, 1928 -0.3611 -0.9575 0.0817 0.5303 0.5398 0.3858 0.2594 0.1485May 1, 1937 -0.5681 0.0349 0.3251 -0.1956 -0.0355 0.0635 0.1017 -0.1214
Jan. 21, 1946 0.0102 -0.6572 0.1781 0.3740 -0.1336 0.0055 0.0364 0.0491Aug. 13, 1948 0.1727 -0.2167 0.2076 -0.1397 -0.1952 -0.0745 -0.0574 0.0070Sept. 9, 1955 0.2382 0.1935 -0.2497 -0.0603 -0.0631 0.0837 0.0465 0.0598
March 3, 1959 0.2806 0.1474 0.0519 0.0133 -0.2327 -0.0421 0.0042 -0.0152Dec. 6, 1265 0.1867 0.0559 0.2450 0.1238 0.1763 0.0680 0.0544 0.0016
Apr. 19, 1968 0.5692 0.0220 0.3112 0.4035 0.1727 0.0672 0.0648 0.1112May 1, 1973 -0.3045 -0.3610 0.7859 0.0796 -0.0201 0.0749 0.0177 0.0855Jan. 9, 1978 -0.0172 -0.3246 -0.0565 -0.0058 -0.0323 0.0949 0.1766 0.1283Dec. 5, 1980 -0.0326 -0.1669 -0.4713 -0.0123 -0.0441 -0.0009 0.0873 0.0515
Jan. 24, 1989 -0.0647 -0.0615 0.0866 0.2418 0.1221 0.1577 0.1268 0.1674Nov., 15, 1994 0.0595 0.1629 -0.7095 -0.3009 -0.0503 0.0494 0.0849 0.0953
Feb. 2, 2000 -0.9923 -0.5221 -1.1371 -0.5513 -0.0303 0.0537 0.0263 -0.0042Sept. 21, 2004 -0.0166 -0.1217 -0.0084 0.3957 0.3219 0.3017 0.1504 0.1514
![Page 35: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/35.jpg)
Machinery: engines, cranes, office computers, lab instruments
10-day pre 5-day pre 5-day post 10-day post 30-day post 60-day post 90-day post 120-day post
July 7, 1928 -0.2987 -0.7174 0.1456 0.2713 0.1865 0.2207 0.1836 0.1959May 1, 1937 -0.3304 0.5261 0.1348 -0.4813 0.1265 0.1036 0.0788 -0.1613
Jan. 21, 1946 0.1569 -0.1507 0.3187 0.4806 -0.0989 0.0566 0.0387 0.0118Aug. 13, 1948 -0.1346 -0.5861 0.5581 0.3080 -0.0898 0.0021 -0.0222 -0.0031Sept. 9, 1955 0.1534 0.1271 0.1519 0.1509 -0.2034 0.0440 0.0087 0.0725
March 3, 1959 0.3461 0.0477 0.1358 0.0899 0.1778 0.1976 0.1497 0.0820Dec. 6, 1265 -0.0731 -0.2612 0.3656 0.0740 0.0252 0.0356 0.1197 0.0437
Apr. 19, 1968 0.3348 0.1499 0.6020 0.5410 0.3867 0.0298 0.0553 0.0268May 1, 1973 -0.5220 -0.5787 0.5310 -0.1950 -0.0247 0.0523 -0.0004 0.0472Jan. 9, 1978 -0.1631 -0.7084 -0.0402 -0.0629 -0.0880 -0.0333 0.1560 0.0959Dec. 5, 1980 -0.3097 -0.2763 -0.3247 -0.0477 -0.0874 -0.0656 0.0175 0.0337
Jan. 24, 1989 -0.1902 -0.2332 -0.0468 -0.0918 -0.0999 0.0840 0.0271 0.0695Nov., 15, 1994 0.0229 0.0603 -0.8157 -0.3530 0.0232 0.0790 0.1349 0.1718
Feb. 2, 2000 -0.2397 0.1583 0.5384 0.4796 0.4876 0.2644 0.1437 0.1748Sept. 21, 2004 0.4490 -0.0071 -0.4519 0.3192 0.1617 0.2079 0.0739 0.0933
![Page 36: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/36.jpg)
Cars: motor vehicles, motor homes, bicycles, auto dealers
10-day pre 5-day pre 5-day post 10-day post 30-day post 60-day post 90-day post 120-day post
July 7, 1928 -0.3149 -0.9173 0.2431 0.1190 0.1245 0.3081 0.2416 0.1685May 1, 1937 -0.2567 0.5730 0.4304 -0.4446 -0.1121 -0.1254 0.0177 -0.1668
Jan. 21, 1946 -0.1411 -0.5959 0.2333 0.5777 -0.1250 0.0196 -0.0221 -0.0383Aug. 13, 1948 0.0083 -0.6201 0.6990 0.2342 -0.1663 0.0083 -0.0552 -0.0240Sept. 9, 1955 0.1599 0.0610 0.7778 0.6886 0.0499 0.1355 -0.0046 0.0229
March 3, 1959 0.2101 0.1388 0.1357 0.1192 0.1937 0.2223 0.2361 0.1574Dec. 6, 1265 -0.2140 -0.0987 -0.2267 -0.1401 0.1196 -0.0526 -0.0988 -0.1258
Apr. 19, 1968 0.2886 -0.1409 0.4066 0.3470 0.0787 -0.0121 0.0618 0.1019May 1, 1973 -0.4142 -0.3785 0.2111 -0.4315 -0.2605 -0.0717 -0.0801 -0.0483Jan. 9, 1978 -0.4863 -0.9124 -0.1802 -0.0949 0.0038 0.1273 0.1815 0.0948Dec. 5, 1980 -0.3281 -0.2981 -0.0646 0.1766 0.0586 0.1510 0.1929 0.1892
Jan. 24, 1989 -0.4017 -0.2899 0.2111 -0.0004 -0.1471 0.0169 -0.0192 0.0513Nov., 15, 1994 0.0475 0.2136 -1.3355 -0.4615 -0.0032 -0.0580 -0.0379 0.0015
Feb. 2, 2000 -0.2794 0.5123 -0.6356 -0.5954 -0.0039 0.1848 -0.0420 -0.0697Sept. 21, 2004 -0.2914 -0.1987 -0.1676 0.2058 -0.0293 0.1057 0.0122 0.0161
![Page 37: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/37.jpg)
Transportation: truck bodies, aircraft and parts, ship
building, school buses
10-day pre 5-day pre 5-day post 10-day post 30-day post 60-day post 90-day post 120-day post
July 7, 1928 -0.1770 -0.5479 -0.1417 0.0080 0.0345 0.0775 0.0536 0.0719May 1, 1937 -0.3765 0.5197 0.4880 -0.4334 -0.1085 -0.1218 -0.1306 -0.3454
Jan. 21, 1946 0.1463 -0.0977 0.2995 0.3688 -0.1508 0.0042 -0.0169 -0.0108Aug. 13, 1948 -0.1775 -0.5199 0.5879 0.3798 -0.0582 -0.0007 -0.0588 -0.0437Sept. 9, 1955 0.2524 0.3774 0.2411 0.1030 -0.1424 0.0940 0.0142 0.0578
March 3, 1959 0.2637 0.1852 0.3795 0.2552 0.1677 0.0726 0.0455 -0.0358Dec. 6, 1265 0.5555 0.2655 0.3495 0.2132 0.1649 0.0911 0.1660 0.0337
Apr. 19, 1968 0.8100 0.3511 0.5307 0.4720 0.2809 0.0494 0.0801 0.0823May 1, 1973 -0.8077 -0.8159 0.3742 -0.3819 -0.3030 -0.1064 -0.0962 0.0200Jan. 9, 1978 -0.1808 -0.6720 0.1892 0.1899 0.0531 0.1541 0.2919 0.2157Dec. 5, 1980 -0.1516 -0.2416 -0.4612 0.0863 0.0975 0.0482 0.1453 0.1168
Jan. 24, 1989 -0.0181 -0.1140 0.2805 0.2095 0.0500 0.1454 0.0814 0.1363Nov., 15, 1994 -0.1747 -0.1025 -0.7538 -0.2725 -0.0244 0.0813 0.1270 0.1279
Feb. 2, 2000 -0.8585 -0.6162 -0.8815 -0.6119 -0.0063 0.1579 0.0781 0.0774Sept. 21, 2004 0.1004 0.1520 -0.0162 0.2004 0.1115 0.1858 0.0713 0.1123
![Page 38: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/38.jpg)
Utilities: electric, gas, sanitary services, water supply
10-day pre 5-day pre 5-day post 10-day post 30-day post 60-day post 90-day post 120-day post
July 7, 1928 -0.3096 -0.7820 -0.0823 0.1148 0.0875 0.1820 0.1108 0.1875May 1, 1937 -0.4897 0.1507 0.0970 -0.7215 -0.2762 -0.0357 -0.0196 -0.1743
Jan. 21, 1946 0.4535 0.2854 0.5447 0.3131 -0.0989 0.0877 0.0701 0.0475Aug. 13, 1948 -0.1079 -0.3624 0.1937 0.0893 -0.0486 0.0118 -0.0457 0.0022Sept. 9, 1955 0.1110 0.1400 0.0020 0.0199 -0.1643 -0.0078 -0.0292 0.0124
March 3, 1959 0.2529 0.2958 0.1419 0.1128 0.0311 -0.0331 -0.0222 0.0030Dec. 6, 1265 -0.1442 -0.1581 0.0359 -0.0561 -0.0118 -0.1440 -0.0713 -0.0665
Apr. 19, 1968 0.2399 0.1959 0.0318 0.0349 0.0407 0.1481 0.0897 0.0888May 1, 1973 -0.1613 -0.2083 0.3670 0.0649 0.0171 -0.0622 -0.0360 -0.0185Jan. 9, 1978 -0.0797 -0.3505 -0.0682 -0.0523 -0.0407 0.0131 0.0072 0.0224Dec. 5, 1980 -0.1278 -0.5001 -0.1880 0.5109 0.1212 0.0117 0.0138 0.0194
Jan. 24, 1989 -0.0618 -0.0947 0.0858 0.0576 0.0487 0.1653 0.1508 0.1510Nov., 15, 1994 -0.0859 -0.2585 -0.1205 0.2545 0.0958 0.1522 0.0841 0.0979
Feb. 2, 2000 0.2199 -0.0650 -0.5377 -0.3564 -0.1188 0.0687 0.0934 0.0715Sept. 21, 2004 -0.0200 0.1473 0.0650 0.1921 0.1209 0.1772 0.1386 0.1501
![Page 39: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/39.jpg)
Retail: department and grocery stores, eating and drinking
establishments, florists
10-day pre 5-day pre 5-day post 10-day post 30-day post 60-day post 90-day post 120-day post
July 7, 1928 -0.0168 -0.5238 0.2630 0.2505 0.2645 0.2864 0.2804 0.2657
May 1, 1937 -0.4907 0.3088 0.0760 -0.5045 -0.1358 0.0025 0.0266 -0.1755
Jan. 21, 1946 0.2718 -0.1005 0.4952 0.4812 0.0059 0.2108 0.2306 0.0697
Aug. 13, 1948 0.0091 -0.2763 0.4433 0.3102 -0.0116 0.0517 0.0198 0.0262
Sept. 9, 1955 0.3037 0.2357 0.5419 0.6124 -0.0495 0.0809 -0.0086 0.0167
March 3, 1959 0.1815 0.1258 0.0239 -0.0874 -0.0060 0.0222 0.0569 0.0384
Dec. 6, 1265 -0.2228 -0.2225 0.0357 -0.0002 -0.0416 -0.1152 -0.0519 -0.0619
Apr. 19, 1968 0.5397 0.2891 0.5766 0.3669 0.2381 0.0374 0.1003 0.0993
May 1, 1973 -0.4494 -0.1939 0.3879 -0.2667 -0.0881 0.0393 -0.0227 0.0180
Jan. 9, 1978 -0.3440 -0.8678 -0.1826 -0.0803 -0.0673 0.0037 0.1462 0.0759
Dec. 5, 1980 -0.3678 -0.3243 -0.2978 -0.0145 0.2197 0.2222 0.3039 0.2517
Jan. 24, 1989 -0.1743 -0.3048 0.2818 0.2785 0.1542 0.2512 0.1427 0.1824
Nov., 15, 1994 0.0745 -0.1155 -0.6436 -0.3193 -0.2606 -0.0399 -0.0124 -0.0124
Feb. 2, 2000 -0.7150 -0.3522 -0.2813 -0.8058 -0.0509 -0.0131 -0.1041 -0.0304
Sept. 21, 2004 -0.0506 -0.1703 0.0988 0.2239 0.1551 0.1531 0.0980 0.1003
![Page 40: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/40.jpg)
Other: paper, periodicals, barbershops, advertising, cable TV operators
10-day pre 5-day pre 5-day post 10-day post 30-day post 60-day post 90-day post 120-day post
July 7, 1928 -0.1738 -0.5644 -0.0537 0.0459 0.0601 0.1237 0.1333 0.1466May 1, 1937 -0.4536 -0.1092 0.0308 -0.3478 -0.0137 0.0121 0.0207 -0.0951
Jan. 21, 1946 0.0035 -0.2923 0.4972 0.3748 -0.0289 0.0971 0.0848 0.0405Aug. 13, 1948 -0.1452 -0.3891 0.2577 0.1577 -0.0623 -0.0008 -0.0121 -0.0107Sept. 9, 1955 0.1938 0.1639 0.2618 0.2297 -0.1136 0.0222 0.0073 0.0479
March 3, 1959 0.4382 0.3829 0.0779 0.0887 0.1767 0.0715 0.0601 0.0278Dec. 6, 1265 -0.0014 -0.0022 0.0338 0.0015 0.0660 -0.0147 0.0221 -0.0214
Apr. 19, 1968 0.4105 0.1515 0.4253 0.3025 0.1850 0.0695 0.0835 0.0960May 1, 1973 -0.4681 -0.4079 0.6036 -0.0154 -0.0894 0.0143 -0.0172 0.0245Jan. 9, 1978 -0.1688 -0.6470 -0.0686 -0.0497 0.0098 0.0855 0.1669 0.1115Dec. 5, 1980 -0.1297 -0.3833 -0.3224 0.2436 0.1052 0.0854 0.1511 0.1467
Jan. 24, 1989 -0.1033 -0.1168 0.3371 0.2686 0.1718 0.2733 0.1886 0.1986Nov., 15, 1994 -0.0255 0.0592 -0.6126 -0.2743 -0.0184 0.0757 0.0911 0.0806
Feb. 2, 2000 -0.3752 -0.2521 0.2076 -0.0252 0.1677 -0.1283 -0.1176 -0.0839Sept. 21, 2004 0.1161 -0.0730 -0.0750 0.3101 0.1010 0.1809 0.0725 0.0580
![Page 41: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/41.jpg)
Gould’s signal
Market may anticipate rate increase Historically, Fed has raised rates during a market
decline Traditional interpretation of Gould’s rule appears to
work better during a strong market rally Some sectors may offer protection when a Fed rate
hike occurs
![Page 42: Industry Responses to Fed Policy Changes CFA Society Houston Wednesday, April 8, 2015 Julie R. Dahlquist, Ph.D., CMT 210-860-7048 jdahlquist@sbcglobal.net.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022081520/56649f175503460f94c2dbd1/html5/thumbnails/42.jpg)
QUESTIONS?