- Alan Greenspan died at 100, leaving behind his most enduring market legacy: the “Greenspan Put” — the expectation that the Fed would cut rates and provide liquidity to cushion severe stock market declines, which morphed into a broader “Fed Put” lasting three decades.
- The Put is currently on hold: when the Fed fought post-pandemic inflation in 2022, it kept hiking even as the S&P fell 25% from January to October — and continued raising rates for another nine months after that.
- The Fed Put’s return depends on inflation: if the next downturn is severe enough to credibly threaten price stability by crushing demand, the backstop would likely reappear — but a mere 20% decline probably wouldn’t be enough to trigger it.
- The moral hazard critique applies more clearly to bank depositors and Treasury market liquidity (where the Fed has demonstrated willingness to intervene) than to equity shareholders, who face genuine catastrophic loss risk regardless.
What Happened?
The death of Alan Greenspan at 100 puts the spotlight on the market doctrine he created. After Black Monday in 1987 — when the S&P 500 fell 20% in a single day — Greenspan personally called major banks to prevent clearinghouse failures, cut rates, and stabilized markets. The playbook was repeated in 1998 during the LTCM crisis, and again after the dot-com bust. Greenspan’s Fed also embraced the “wealth channel” theory: rising stocks made consumers spend more, so falling stocks threatened the real economy, justifying central bank intervention. That logic persisted for three decades, surviving into the Bernanke, Yellen, and Powell eras.
Why It Matters?
The Fed Put has been the single most important implicit subsidy to equity risk-taking in modern financial history. Investors who believed the Fed would backstop severe declines could rationally take more risk than the fundamentals alone warranted. But the post-pandemic inflation episode broke the chain: when the Fed hiked aggressively in 2022, it continued tightening even as stocks fell 25% — a stark departure from the prior three decades. With inflation still above the 2% target (it has been above target continuously since February 2021), the Fed’s dual mandate is tilted toward price stability over growth support. That leaves equities without the safety net markets had come to expect.
What’s Next?
The next severe market downturn will be the real test. If a crash is deep enough to convincingly threaten deflationary pressure — say, a 40-50% decline — the Fed Put would likely reactivate. But investors counting on a 20% dip to trigger rescue cuts may be disappointed. The more durable form of the Put remains in fixed income and banking: the Fed has shown it will intervene to preserve Treasury market liquidity and protect bank depositors. For equity investors, the message from 2022 is clear — the backstop has conditions, and high inflation is one of them.
Source: The Wall Street Journal












