Time to update your lingo - the "Yellen call"

The Yellen Put, which was previously known as the Bernanke Put and before that the Greenspan Put is on the way out

The Wall Street Journal with the 'Yellen Call':

How the 'Yellen Call' Will Keep Stocks in Check (may be gated)

The article, in summary says

The Bernanke / Greenspan put was supposed to underpin share prices:

  • In the late 1990s traders became convinced that if stocks fell too hard, the Fed then-Chairman Alan Greenspan would cut rates and stem losses ... like a put option to insure against losses

But now ... the Yellen call is likely to keep stocks in check

  • The Fed no longer looks likely to raise rates four times this year ... but it is still intent on raising them
  • Now, rather than thinking the Fed has provided them with a put, investors might be better off thinking they have provided the Fed with a call option
  • ... the stronger the stock market becomes, the more emboldened the Fed could feel about its ability to raise rates
  • If it does so, that could put a lid on rising share prices and valuations
This doesn't mean that stocks will necessarily slump due to the Fed's actions. But it will result in a short of push-and-pull between investors and the Fed. That could mean share prices may be in for a prolonged period of subdued gains.

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