Rates Spark: Upping the Ante on Policy Rates

 | Mar 08, 2023 05:58

Chair Powell has sent a clear message: the Fed is back in the driving seat. At a very minimum, the Fed has given itself the option to deliver a 50bp hike from the March meeting. It's now discounted that way. Friday's payrolls are key though. So is next week's US CPI report. As that rate hike pendulum still has swing potential back to 25bp, it's all about the data.h2 Powell gives the Fed a free option to up the pace to 50bp, if needed.../h2

The market has now re-priced to a 50bp hike from the March meeting. It's not fully discounted, but it's discounted enough to give the Federal Reserve the option to deliver 50bp if required. In the end, it will be up to the data releases to come, especially this Friday's payroll report. The clearest remark made was that the labor market remains very tight, and the ex-housing services sector inflation is too high. These are related, as a material loosening in the labor market is likely required in order to mute services sector inflation.

Expect volatility in the rate hike expectation for March to remain elevated though. It could just take the outcome of a sub-150K payroll on Friday to swing the rate hike pendulum back towards a 25bp hike, especially if accompanied by some calming in wage inflation. Typically the Fed can have a heads-up on some data releases ahead of time, and if that's the case here then the outcome of a subdued payroll is less likely. But clearly, this is a key number and is followed by the February CPI report due on Tuesday of next week.

The back end is continuing to resist the full extent of the Fed's message for the front end.

Financial conditions have not materially tightened though, partly as longer-dated market rates did not rise in any material fashion. The 10yr briefly broke above 4% as a bit of an impact reaction, but then fell back below. Risk assets came under some pressure, putting some interest back into core duration buying. The curve in consequence hit a new cycle extreme for inversion, with the 2/10yr breaking through -100bp. The back end is continuing to resist the full extent of the Fed's message for the front end.

We'd argue that this degree of inversion is being driven by longer-dated real yields being too low. If the US economy is as dynamic as is being portrayed, then a real yield in the 10yr at 1.6% is too low. A move up to the 2% area would make sense, offset by further falls in the 10yr inflation breakeven (now 2.4%). That combination would not need to push the 10yr above 4.25%, but it could or should certainly be moving in that direction if a 50bp hike is to be really justified on pure macro grounds.

In the background, the Fed will no doubt have noted the remarkable rise in the 2yr inflation breakeven, which was at 2% in mid-January and reached 3.4% before Chair Powell spoke. It's now at 3.25% – a step in the right direction.

h2 2023 forwards show the Fed is reacting to strong US data, but 2024 forwards lag behind/h2
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