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						Wall St. looks to Fed outlook Wednesday for early 
						Christmas gift
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		 [December 15, 2018]   
		By Stephen Culp 
 NEW YORK (Reuters) - Investors are eager 
		for a touch of Christmas cheer from the U.S. Federal Reserve next week, 
		hoping for signs the central bank may ease up on interest rate hikes 
		next year and spark a Santa Claus rally.
 
 U.S. stocks are having their worst December performance in 16 years with 
		the S&P 500 <.SPX> notching a 5 percent drop so far this month. The 
		Fed's ongoing reversal of easy-money policy is a major overhang, and it 
		is expected to raise rates more at the end of its two-day meeting on 
		Wednesday.
 
 That would mark a fourth consecutive December increase since 2015 when 
		it started gradually lifting them. The question on investors' minds is 
		whether it could be the last.
 
 "It's imperative (the Fed releases) a dovish statement and an 
		accommodative Q&A session," said Bucky Hellwig, senior vice president at 
		BB&T Wealth Management in Birmingham, Alabama. "If not, that would put 
		stocks at risk again."
 
 "The Fed's the key to a strong December, and it's getting late in the 
		year."
 
 
		
		 
		Recent comments from policymakers have fueled expectations for a timeout 
		signal when the rate-setting committee's statement is released along 
		with officials' individual projections for how much further they will 
		rise in 2019 and beyond.
 
 "The market's been under incredible pressure, concerned that the Fed is 
		just going to go charging ahead," said Stephen Massocca, senior vice 
		president at Wedbush Securities in San Francisco. "The Fed understands 
		that and from their latest commentary they're starting to walk it back a 
		little bit."
 
 U.S. markets have been highly sensitive to any hint that the Fed is 
		ready to slow down or even take a pause. The central bank has lifted 
		rates eight times since December 2015 in a bid to restore them to normal 
		after having slashed borrowing costs to near zero to combat the 
		financial crisis a decade ago.
 
 Last month, when Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said rates were near the 
		range of policymakers' estimates of "neutral" - the level at which they 
		neither stimulate nor impede the economy - the S&P jumped by the most in 
		eight months.
 
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			A Wall Street sign is seen outside the New York Stock Exchange 
			September 19, 2008. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson/File Photo 
            
			 
"There's no doubt there's been a shift in sentiment towards a more dovish Fed," 
said Charlie Ripley, senior market strategist for Allianz Investment Management 
in Minneapolis.
 Other FOMC members have recently weighed in.
 
 Earlier this month, Fed Governor Lael Brainard nodded to growing risks to growth 
overseas and in corporate debt markets at home. St. Louis Federal Reserve 
President James Bullard chimed in that investors were nervous that the Fed had 
gone too far. [nL1N1YC1E1]
 
 According to their latest projections in September, the median view among 
policymakers was for three rate hikes in 2019. Interest rate futures used to 
gauge the probability of further hikes now reflect almost no chance of that 
happening.
 
 "If you look back at even as late as September, there were probably three rate 
hikes priced in to 2019, where now there's right around one," Ripley said.
 
 Some recent U.S. economic data, including an underwhelming jobs report and tepid 
inflation numbers, along with pressures such as the ongoing U.S.-China trade 
skirmish, also appear to support an argument for a pause in Fed tightening in 
2019.
 
 It is a mixed picture, though, as robust retail sales data for November showed 
consumer spending remained on solid ground, which could suggest no need for the 
Fed to let up. [nL1N1YJ0MA]
 
 How the rest of December plays out likely comes down to how Fed officials 
communicate their view of a complex economic picture, said Oliver Pursche, vice 
chairman and chief market strategist at Bruderman Asset Management in New York.
 
 "If you get a dovish-sounding (Fed) statement that stresses the fact that the 
economy is good, but given that there's no inflation to worry about we can take 
a pause, that could lead to a 7 to 8 percent rally into year-end."
 
 (Reporting by Stephen Culp, additional reporting by Caroline Valetkevitch, 
Charles Mikolajczak; Editing by Dan Burns and Richard Chang)
 
				 
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