Focused on Powell, markets missed signs Fed would pause
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[February 02, 2019]
By Ann Saphir
AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) - The Federal
Reserve's decision Wednesday to scrap a promise for further rates hikes
and be "patient" on further moves took financial markets and economists
by surprise, but the signs were plain to see.
That is the view, at least, of Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan, who
has been warning of downside risks since October, based on widening
spreads in the credit markets that signaled tighter financial
conditions. Though credit spreads have since narrowed, signaling an ease
in financial conditions, slower global growth has amplified his worries
since then, he said Friday.
"I am not saying we are never going to raise rates again," Kaplan told
reporters after a talk to The Texas Lyceum in Austin. "I am saying we
should not be taking any action now, in my opinion, for certainly the
first couple of quarters. And I reserve the right to change my mind."
Kaplan said that in coming months he will be keeping a weather eye on
whether credit spreads "gap out" again, as well as business spending,
corporate profits, and financial conditions.
A look at the data so far is not encouraging. Business spending already
held down U.S. GDP growth last year, figures from the third-quarter
show. Junk bond spreads blew out by more than 2 percentage points in the
fourth quarter, though retraced about half of that so far in 2019 and
are not extraordinarily wide by historical standards.
Analysts are slashing estimates for 2019 corporate profit growth to
single digits or lower, according to Refinitiv's IBES.
Kaplan's comments, made just hours after a U.S Labor Department report
showed job growth surged in January, underscore the degree to which the
Fed's decisions are being driven by financial conditions rather than
macroeconomic data showing strength in the economy.
Kaplan downplayed the jobs report, calling it "noisy" and noting an
unexplained rise in people working part-time jobs who would rather be
working full-time. For himself, he said, the need to pause on rate hikes
has been in the cards for a while.
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Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell holds a press conference
following a two day Federal Open Market Committee policy meeting in
Washington, U.S., January 30, 2019. REUTERS/Leah Millis
"I may not have as big a megaphone, but I foreshadowed this," Kaplan said.
As big a megaphone, he meant, as Fed Chairman Jerome Powell, who in October said
the Fed is a "long way" from neutral, suggesting several more interest-rate
hikes would be needed to keep the economy from overheating. Powell retreated
somewhat from this view in November before again flagging future rate hikes
after the Fed's fourth 2018 rate hike in December.
This week, the Fed left rates unchanged in a well-telegraphed decision. However,
the Powell Fed caught markets off guard with extremely dovish messaging both in
its post-meeting statement and in the Fed chair's news conference that followed.
The Fed's turnaround was "perplexing," said Roberto Perli, an economist at
Cornerstone Macro in one of the more understated reactions. Barclays strategist
Michael Gapen said the Fed's communications were "in tatters."
"I was concerned coming out of the December meeting that maybe we weren’t in the
right place, or we weren’t communicating the appropriate stance. I think to our
credit, we rectified that," Kaplan told reporters, noting that he had said in
January that he thought the Fed should pause for a while.
St. Louis Fed President James Bullard, in an earlier interview on CNBC, also
said he was pleased with the Fed's new stance. He also said that while the
January job gains were strong, the data is backward looking.
Bullard has been an even longer proponent of stopping rate hikes than Kaplan,
and earlier this month said the Fed had come to the "end of the road" on rate
hikes.
Though they missed earlier signs of a pause, markets and economists are now
fully on board.
Noting the Fed's new mantra of patience, JP Morgan economist Michael Feroli
summed up the implications of the booming jobs market in this way: "It just
doesn't matter."
(Reporting by Ann Saphir with reporting by Howard Schneider, Richard Leong and
Dan Burns; editing by Chizu Nomiyama)
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