Your current location is:{Current column} >>Text
Fed Delivers Hike, But Powell Throws Cold Water On Hawks
{Current column}8219People have watched
IntroductionThe market had already fully “priced in” a 75bps (0.75%) rate hike from the Federal Rese ...
The Top ten foreign exchange reserves rankings in 2022market had already fully “priced in” a 75bps (0.75%) rate hike from the Federal Reserve, with only an outside chance at a full 100bps (1.00%) move, so yesterday's as-expected 75bps increase, bringing the benchmark Fed Funds rate to the 2.25-2.50% range, has had only a minimal impact on price by itself.
Despite the lack of fireworks from this month’s decision itself, there are still actionable tidbits to glean from the central bank’s monetary policy statement and Fed Chairman Powell’s ongoing press conference:
The FOMC’s monetary policy statement
As the “redline” comparison below shows, there were only small tweaks to the central bank’s monetary policy statement:
- Downgraded “Overall economic activity appears to have picked up after edging down in the first quarter”to “Recent indicators of spending and production have softened”
- Acknowledged higher food prices in addition to energy.
- Recharacterized Russia’s “invasion” of Ukraine to a “war”
- Removed the reference to COVID related lockdowns in China and their impact on supply chains.
- The vote was unanimous after Esther George’s dovish dissent last month.
Federal Reserve Excerpt
Source: Federal Reserve
Fed Chairman Jerome Powell’s press conference
As all central bankers are wont to do, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell is trying to toe the line between offering useful guidance and avoiding pre-committing to any specific policy path in his press conference. Indeed, he explicitly stated that the committee will go “meeting-by-meeting” and give less clear guidance now that interest rates are “in the range of neutral.”
On balance, the Fed chief is coming off as relatively dovish, and traders have taken that message to heart, driving down the implied odds of a 75bps interest rate increase in September from above 50% to roughly 40% according to the CME’s FedWatch tool.
Other headlines from Powell’s press conference so far:
- FOMC STRONGLY COMMITTED TO BRINGING INFLATION DOWN
- PACE OF RATE HIKES TO DEPEND ON INCOMING DATA
- ANOTHER UNUSUALLY LARGE INCREASE TO DEPEND ON DATA
- LIKELY APPROPRIATE TO SLOW INCREASES AT SOME POINT
- FED TO OFFER LESS `CLEAR GUIDANCE' ON RATE MOVES, WILL MAKE DECISIONS MEETING-BY-MEETING
- POLICY CURRENTLY AT NEUTRAL, NEED TO GET TO AT LEAST A MODERATELY RESTRICTIVE LEVEL
- TAKE EST. FOR RATES NEXT YEAR `WITH A GRAIN OF SALT'
- PATH TO SOFT LANDING HAS NARROWED, MAY NARROW FURTHER
- DO NOT THINK THE US IS CURRENTLY IN A RECESSION
- HAVEN'T MADE DECISION ON POINT WHEN TO SLOW RATE HIKES
- THERE'S SOME EVIDENCE LABOR DEMAND MAY BE SLOWING A BIT
Market impact
Because the monetary policy statement met the market’s expectations almost word-for-word, there was essentially no notable reaction to the initial release. However, as we go to press, traders are clearly acknowledging the dovish tone of Powell’s press conference.Most importantly, treasury yields are declining across the curve, with the 2-year yield dropping 6bps to 3.0% and the benchmark 10-year now yielding 2.74%, down 7bps, to test its lowest level since mid-April.
Not surprisingly, stocks are enthused by the potential for less aggressive interest rate hikes, with major indices rising by between 1.3% (the Dow) and 4% (the NASDAQ Composite). The greenback is seeing major sell pressure come in to fall by nearly 100 pips against most of her major rivals, and gold is testing 2-week highs in the mid-$1730s.
These initial trends could extend further as traders price in the potential for slower rate hikes from the Fed throughout the rest of 2022.
Original Post
Statement: The content of this article does not represent the views of FTI website. The content is for reference only and does not constitute investment suggestions. Investment is risky, so you should be careful in your choice! If it involves content, copyright and other issues, please contact us and we will make adjustments at the first time!Tags:
Related articles
Dollar edges higher, with all eyes on the Federal Reserve By
{Current column}- The U.S. dollar edged higher in early holiday-impacted European trade Monday, at the start of a we ...
Read moreDollar dips as US election outcome remains uncertain, Fed rate cut looms By Reuters
{Current column}By Wayne ColeSYDNEY (Reuters) - The dollar slipped in Asia on Monday as investors braced for a poten ...
Read moreSnap stock jumps 9% on Q3 results beat; analysts remain cautious By
{Current column}-- Snap reported Tuesday third-quarter results that beat estimates, underpinned by stronger-than-exp ...
Read more
Popular Articles
- New Zealand central bank unexpectedly hikes rates 50 bps, kiwi rallies By Reuters
- American Airlines beats Q3 expectations By
- Trump speaks in battleground Pennsylvania, Harris makes Michigan push By Reuters
- Volkswagen weighs wage cuts, bonus reductions in push to save 4 billion euros
- Japan CPI inflation rises as expected in April, more pressure on BOJ By
- Dollar dips as US election outcome remains uncertain, Fed rate cut looms By Reuters
Latest articles
-
4 big analyst picks: Roblox a buy after Q1 By
-
Japan's government in flux after election gives no party majority By Reuters
-
US economy grows by 2.8% in third quarter, slower than expected By
-
US election uncertainty is no reason to exit the market: UBS By
-
China's economy improves in March, will consolidate recovery, says Premier Li By Reuters
-
Volkswagen weighs wage cuts, bonus reductions in push to save 4 billion euros