For now the Fed’s firmly on hold While Powell made statements quite bold It’s time to assess How great is the mess Created by stories we’ve told This morning then, Christine is live With certainty that twenty-five Is how much she’ll hike As she tries to spike Inflation while growth she’ll still drive
To virtually nobody’s surprise, the Fed left policy rates on hold yesterday after what has been characterized by many as a hawkish pause. This seems a fair assessment given the effort by Chairman Powell to stress that inflation remains too high and has not been falling as rapidly as they would like to see. For instance, comments like the following during the press conference were quite clear:
“If you look at core PCE inflation over the last six months, you’re not seeing a lot of progress. It’s running at a level over 4.5%, far above our target and not really moving down. We want to see it moving down decisively, that’s all.”
“We’re two-and-a-quarter years into this, and forecasters, including Fed forecasters, have consistently thought inflation was about to turn down and typically forecasted that it would, and been wrong.”
“What we’d like to see is credible evidence that inflation is topping out and then getting it to come down.”
These were just some of the comments but give a flavor for what the mindset appears to be in the Eccles Building. Looking at the dot plot, the median expectation is for two more rate hikes in 2023 and there were zero expectations of a rate cut. The point is that higher for longer, which is what they have been preaching for upwards of a year, remains the mantra and given how robust the employment situation remains, they do not seem likely to change that view in the near term. A quick look at the Fed funds futures market shows a market probability of 71% for a rate hike in July where things peak, and then pricing for a cut in January. However, as I have maintained, I see inflation remaining quite sticky and the probability of a rate cut as far lower than that.
The market response was perfectly sensible in the bond market, where yields continue to climb, and the yield curve inversion increased to -91bps. 2-Year yields are now back to 4.73% as traders and investors price in a much higher probability that even if rates don’t rise much further, they are unlikely to fall back. In fact, 10-Year yields around the world have all risen further as the global tightening cycle seems set to continue. Recall, we saw Canada, Australia and now the Fed come out hawkishly and this morning the ECB is set to follow suit with a 25bp rate hike. At this stage, there are no G10 central banks that believe they have solved the inflation problem…and they are right.
A quick look at European sovereign yields ahead of the ECB announcement shows they have risen between 5bps and 10bps this morning as there is clearly an expectation that after the extremely hawkish commentary from Powell yesterday, Madame Lagarde will be forced to follow suit. In truth, that seems a reasonable expectation and when looking at the OIS market in Europe, expectations appear to be for another one or two hikes after today’s move. Given that inflation remains sticky there too, that doesn’t seem far-fetched.
On last thing regarding central bank hikes is the Bank of England next week, where a 25bp hike is fully priced, but more impressively, an additional 4 hikes are priced in by the end of the year. Inflation in the UK has clearly been even more problematic than in the Eurozone or the US, while the Old Lady has been lagging lately so this does make sense as well.
There are, though several places where tighter policy is not on the cards, namely China and Japan. Starting with Japan first, YCC remains the current policy framework and there is no indication they are going to change things anytime soon. 10-year yields there remain well below the YCC cap and there is much more discussion regarding the potential for a snap election in Japan than about monetary policy. The yen (-0.8%) is weakening further today as the more hawkish Fed combined with the continued dovishness of the BOJ weigh on the currency. We’ve seen this movie before when the dollar ran up above 150 in October, and while that is still a long way from today’s price, the trend since March has been very clear. Absent a major policy change from either the Fed or the BOJ, look for a weaker yen over time.
As to China, they did cut their Medium-Term Lending Facility rate by 10bps last night as widely expected although the currency did not really move as it was fully priced already. However, the Chinese government is clearly flailing about for ways to support the economy without increasing the leverage that already exists. The problem is that the PBOC toolkit, as well as the CCP toolkit, relies on centralized direction not market activity, and it appears that the limits of those policies are starting to be reached. There is little reason to believe the renminbi is going to rebound in the short-term as a weaker currency is the only outlet valve they have. Given measured inflation in China has been so low, I expect we can see a continued grind lower (dollar higher) in the second half of the year. Think 7.50 by Christmas.
With all that news, US equity markets had a mixed picture yesterday with the NASDAQ continuing its run higher with a small (0.4%) gain, but the rest of the market under more pressure. Chinese equities responded quite positively to the rate cut there with substantial gains, but the Nikkei was simply flat on the day. And now, European bourses are in the red by about -0.7% with US futures also pointing lower.
Oil prices (+0.75%) are edging higher but that is after a reversal yesterday brought them back below $70/bbl. There remains a great deal of controversy over just how badly demand is going to be hit given the lackluster Chinese economy and the huge split on views regarding the US and Europe with a recession call still quite popular although there are those who are now calling for a successful soft landing by the Fed. Precious metals are a little less precious this morning as are base metals which are indicative of dollar strength I believe. However, net, I would say the commodity space is more in the recession camp than not.
Finally, the dollar is stronger vs virtually all its EMG counterparts with HUF (-1.25%) the laggard as market participants take profits in anticipation of a rate cut from Hungary vs. the Fed’s tough talk. But the bulk of the bloc is weaker across all three regions. In the G10, while the yen is worst off, we are seeing weakness almost everywhere except NOK (+0.3%) which is clearly benefitting from oil’s modest rally. Given the Fed’s unambiguous hawkishness, I suspect the dollar will remain better bid than not for a while yet.
On the data front, there is a lot coming today as follows: Retail Sales (exp -0.2%, +0.1% ex autos); Initial Claims (245K); Continuing Claims (1768K); Empire Manufacturing (-15.1); Philly Fed (-14.0); IP (0.1%); and Capacity Utilization (79.7%). At this point, the Retail Sales data is likely the most important as the discussion regarding a recession will hinge on whether or not economic activity is still improving. Remember, though, this data is nominal, not inflation adjusted. On a real basis, Retail Sales have been falling for 6 months straight, not a good sign. As to the Fed speaking slate, nobody is on the calendar today, but we will hear from three (Bullard, Waller and Barkin) tomorrow, with all likely to be focused on reiterating the hawkish message.
A hawkish Fed bodes well for the dollar going forward, so unless (until?) something in the US economy breaks, my money is on higher rates and a stronger dollar.
Good luck
Adf