Quarterly Market Commentary – January 2025

A year ago, we told you that we thought we were in an era of higher inflation (higher than we had seen from 2009 to 2021) and that it was possible we could see a recession in 2024. As it turned out, the inflation high water mark for the year occurred at the end of March with a Consumer Price Index (CPI) reading of 3.5% and bottomed the end of September with a reading of 2.4%. The latest CPI number is from the end of November, and it came in at 2.7%. We did not see a recession in 2024 and the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta’s latest GDPNow™ estimates on 2 January 2025 is for real GDP growth of 2.6%. So, we saw inflation that’s higher than the Federal Reserve target of 2.0% but not completely crazy and reasonable GDP growth. U.S. unemployment increased early in the year breaking above 4.0% in May 2024 and remaining there through the end of the year, with the November 30th number coming in at 4.2%.

Considering the relatively low CPI numbers and the gradually increasing unemployment rate the Federal Reserve cut the Federal Funds Rate by .50% at their September meeting then cut it by .25% in November and December. Interestingly, the fall in the Federal Funds Rate was NOT matched by a decline in long-term treasury rates. On the contrary, such rates have risen, with the yield on the 10-year Treasury Note rising from 3.6% on 19 September 2024 to 4.5% on 31 December 2024. The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage rate responded similarly, rising from 6.6% in mid-September to 7.3% at the end of the year. The falling short term interest rates and rising long term rates have un-inverted the yield curve and restored it to its “normal” upward sloping configuration. This makes it profitable for banks to once again borrow short term and lend long term and should result in greater bank lending going forward. As we highlighted in the third quarter the “un-inversion” often coincides with the onset of recession, but we’re not seeing declining economic indicators that would suggest the odds of a recession were increasing.

The U.S. stock and bond markets in ’24 looked a lot like the stock and bond markets in ’23. Long-term bonds returned nothing as interest rates remained near their recent highs. The stock market was again dominated by AI related technology companies as capital spending on new servers and new server farms remained extremely robust. Other stocks did well, but once again tech led by a large margin. The returns of the three main U.S. stock indices illustrate this well: in ’24 the Nasdaq 100 (tech heavy) was up 24.88%, the S&P 500© (broader, but also tech heavy) was up 23.31%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average (much less tech heavy but also narrower and differently weighted) was up only 12.88%.