Weekly Inflation Outlook: For The Fed, It’s Still Just Talk

 | Apr 25, 2022 08:34

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • Fed-speak last week was designed to test market reaction to trial balloon of 75bps
  • Markets clearly rejected the Fed’s inquiry in this regard
  • Hawk talk is easy and consequence-free. Actions will be more measured.

Way back in the misty recesses of bond market history—that would be the early 1990s—monetary policy was still conducted largely in the shadows. When the Federal Reserve met on policy, there was no post-meeting announcement or heaven forbid a press conference about what they had decided. The change in policy was communicated by call-and-response.

Suppose the overnight Fed funds rate had been at 5% and market expectations were for a rate hike. The interbank brokers would set the market at 5.25% and wait to see how the Fed’s Open Markets Desk would respond during their scheduled intervention time of 11:30am. If the Desk came in with "system repos,” it signaled that they thought the 5.25% rate was too high—therefore, they were telling the market that no tightening had actually been implemented. If they came in with “matched sales,” it meant 5.25% was too low and the Fed had raised rates to at least 5.50%. (The message being: we’ll have to wait until tomorrow, when we repeat the experiment again, until we know whether it’s 5.50% or 5.75%.) If there was no action from the Desk, it meant they were comfortable with 5.25%.

Nowadays, the call and response is reversed: the Fed calls, the market responds.

Coming into this week, the market assumed that the FOMC is planning to hike overnight rates by 50bps at its May 4 meeting, and that was priced in. Then, last Monday, St. Louis Fed President Bullard casually mentioned that he “wouldn’t rule out” a 75bps hike in interest rates at some point.

On Tuesday, 5-year interest rates shot up 13bps to 2.92%. Remember, as recently as September the 5-year Treasury note was at 0.75%! After a small retracement on Wednesday, yields exceeded 3% on Thursday and got to almost 3.05% on Friday. Now, Bullard is understood to be a hawk. But on Thursday Fed Chairman Powell delivered his most-hawkish comments yet although he didn’t specifically mention 75bps.

Stocks that morning were in the process of setting a two-week high, but heard the message. Between early Thursday and Friday’s close, the S&P dropped 5.4% on increasing volume (see chart, source Bloomberg). The clear message? “We were okay with 50bps. But back off a bit from the 75bps talk.”

The FOMC found the pain point. The hawkish talk was their call, and the market response is crystal clear. As a result, we can be pretty sure the Fed will not be hiking 75bps on May 4 and, if the stock market doesn’t find a floor in the next few days, you can be confident that Fed speakers will come forth with soothing utterances.

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