How Do Stocks Perform During Fed Easing Cycles?
Additional content provided by Brian Booe, Analyst, Research.
With a week as jam-packed with economic data, earnings, and events as last week, it’s no surprise it ended with a bout of volatility. Stocks broadly treaded water for most of the week as market participants digested the latest big tech earnings, the July Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) decision, a flurry of economic data, and another U.S. tariff salvo — before major equity averages ultimately slumped in response to a weaker-than-expected payrolls print paired with the largest revision to prior months in five years. The payrolls surprise sparked what is arguably a necessary breather for an overbought U.S. equity market to grind higher, while also fueling a notable short-term Treasury rally as Federal Reserve (Fed) rate cut bets jumped.
Fed funds futures had just a 65% chance of a September rate cut priced in to start the week, tumbling as low as a 39% chance on Thursday as investors digested Fed Chair Powell’s FOMC meeting press conference, hinting that rates may remain elevated. However, Friday’s slate of economic data undermined the Fed’s ‘wait-and-see’ approach and revealed some cracks in the labor market, inspiring traders to fully price in two Fed rate cuts before investors sing Auld Lang Syne on New Year’s Eve.
Fed Funds Futures Price in Two 2025 Rate Cuts Again

Source: LPL Research, Bloomberg 08/04/25
Disclosure: Estimates may not materialize as predicted and are subject to change. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.
We would be remiss not to mention that data arriving over the seven weeks between now and the September 17 FOMC session could shift the tide again. However, with the spike in expectations of the Fed resuming its rate cutting cycle next month, we ask: how do equities perform over the course of a Fed easing cycle? Based on performance during the last nine major easing cycles dating back to the 1970s (defined as the initial period of Fed rate cuts in the easing cycle through the next hike, or a pause in monetary policy changes no longer than one year), the S&P 500 has broadly generated positive returns. The equity benchmark moved higher during easing cycles two-thirds of the time (67%), adding an average of 30.3% over the course of easing cycles and the subsequent one-year pause, with a median return of 13.1%. The study did yield two outliers: one being the rate cutting cycle ahead of the dot com bubble in the late 1990s, which marked not only the second-longest cycle in our study but also a blistering 161% rally. The second outlier and weakest set of returns came during the brunt of the great financial crisis, as central bankers scrambled to rejuvenate the American economy and kickstart a banking system in turmoil — in which the S&P 500 shed 23.5%. Excluding the two outliers, the equity benchmark returned 19.3% over Fed rate cutting cycles.
S&P 500 Cumulative Performance During Policy Easing Cycles
One Day After First Cut | Day Before Next Rate Hike (max of 1 year pause) | Number of Days | S&P 500 Cumulative Return |
7/2/1974 | 6/1/1975 | 334 | 13.0% |
4/2/1980 | 8/6/1980 | 126 | 20.6% |
6/2/1981 | 12/31/1981 | 212 | -3.2% |
10/3/1984 | 2/12/1985 | 132 | 12.9% |
6/6/1984 | 9/4/1993 | 1,551 | 62.8% |
7/7/1995 | 6/29/1999 | 1,453 | 161.1% |
1/4/2001 | 6/24/2004 | 1,267 | -9.6% |
9/19/2007 | 12/16/2009 | 819 | -23.5% |
8/1/2019 | 3/16/2021 | 593 | 38.2% |
9/19/2024 | 319 | 12.0% | |
Average: | 30.3% | ||
Median: | 13.0% | ||
Percent Positive: | 66.7% |
Source: LPL Research, Bloomberg 08/04/25
Disclosure: All indexes are unmanaged and cannot be invested in directly. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.
What's Next?
Just 319 days into the current cycle, well below the average of 721 days per easing cycle for our study, the S&P 500 is up 12.0% with additional cuts likely on the way. Using history and prior Fed cutting cycles as a guide, some upside potential may remain for the second half of 2025. Further, the latest big tech earnings reports continued to deliver robust artificial intelligence (AI) spending plans. In addition to signaling the secular AI growth theme remains intact, these spending plans are a big potential driver of earnings growth and future productivity gains. But of course, past performance does not guarantee future results, and a new tariff regime not seen since the 1930s could slow earnings growth and fuel volatility.
The delayed effects of trade policy are likely to weigh on the economy in the second half, leading to weaker labor market demand (as noted in our2025 Midyear Outlook). Recent market complacency toward trade policy and an economic narrative dependent upon strong economic data has caught our attention in recent weeks as a potential point of weakness. With only a handful of major trade deals left to be inked (namely China and Mexico), a floor for the effective tariff rate at 15% is likely set. The effects will be temporary, but some upward pressure on inflation and a drag on profit margins have yet to be felt and will be this market’s biggest test over the seasonally weak period for the stock market over August and September. Friday’s slate of data and tariff announcements may have partially helped reset market expectations, but a lot of optimism lingers, and tariff risks should not be ignored in the near term.
Conclusion
Bottom line, investors may be well served by bracing for occasional bouts of volatility given how much optimism is currently reflected in equity prices. LPL’s Strategic and Tactical Asset Allocation Committee (STAAC) maintains its tactical neutral stance on equities. The STAAC advises against increasing portfolio risk beyond benchmark targets currently and continues to monitor tariff negotiations, economic data, earnings, the bond market, and various technical indicators to identify a potentially more attractive entry point to add equities on weakness. The Committee’s regional preferences across the U.S, developed international, and emerging markets (EM) are aligned with benchmarks. The Committee still favors growth over value, large caps over small caps, and the communication services and financials sectors.
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