Thursday, November 3, 2022

Fed stays the course

The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) of the US Federal Reserve (Fed) has decided to hike the target for the benchmark federal funds rate to a range of 3.75% to 4%, its highest level since 2008. It is an unprecedented fourth hike of 75bps each at the consecutive meetings. The Committee indicated that “ongoing increases” would still likely be needed before the rates become “sufficiently restrictive” to slow down the inflation.

In a post meeting press statement, the Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said, “incoming data since our last meeting suggests that the ultimate level of interest rates will be higher than previously expected.” He added that it was “very premature” to discuss when the Fed might pause its increases.

 

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Further hikes could be lower than 75bps

The FOMC statement promised to take economic risks more clearly into account in deciding the size of any further rate increases. The FOMC statement read, “in determining the pace of future increases in the target range, the Committee will take into account the cumulative tightening of monetary policy, the lags with which monetary policy affects economic activity and inflation, and economic and financial developments."

The statement is being widely interpreted to mean that the future hikes, from the FOMC’s December 2022 meeting onwards, could be lower than 50bps. Though no dot plot (a traditional indicator of Fed official’s view on future rate hikes) was released after the meeting.

No recession, but less chance of a soft landing

Chairman Powell expressed hope that the U.S. economy can escape a recession as the Federal Reserve raises interest rates to lower inflation. He was however skeptical about the soft landing of the economy. He said that given the persistence of price pressure this year, the window of opportunity for a "soft landing" has narrowed; though he is still hopeful of a soft landing.

"Has it narrowed? Yes," Powell said at a press conference after the Fed's latest rate hike. "Is it still possible? Yes."

It is pertinent to note that signs are emerging in the US economy that a hard landing is now probable. The latest PMI came at 45. The stress in households is becoming more evident as personal savings are collapsing; credit card debt is rising at a much faster rate; over a third of the small businesses are unable to pay rent on time. The larger engine of the US economy, the consumer, has already started to stutter.

Markets disappointed

Stock markets corrected sharply after the Fed’s decision, with benchmark S&P500 shedding 2.5% and Nasdaq Composite diving 3.6%. Volumes were large as the market dived post Powell’s press statement, indicating heavy unwinding of positions.

US Dollar Index (DXY) ended more than half of a percentage point higher to close above 112.

Gold and Bitcoin were lower.

The Benchmark 10yr treasury yields were higher by 87bps at 4.10%.

 

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