Bond markets don't buy hawkish Fed's view on how high U.S. rates can go
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[December 20, 2021] By
Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss
NEW YORK (Reuters) -The Federal Reserve's
more hawkish turn this week came amid heightened worries about economic
recovery and inflation, but it has barely changed the bond market's view
that short-term interest rates could top out below the U.S. central
bank's estimated peak.
Current betting even has rates staying below the inflation level the Fed
projected over the next few years.
Since the Federal Open Market Committee released its policy statement
Wednesday, markets have priced the terminal rate where policy rates will
stop going up, at between 1.4% to 1.7%, according to eurodollar futures'
view of U.S. rates in three years.
The Fed does not forecast a terminal rate, but the market's expectation
of when the current hiking cycle will peak is well below the U.S.
central bank's view of 2.5%, and lower still than the revised core
inflation estimate of 2.6% next year.
The Fed's neutral rate has been 2.5% for a couple of years after
trending down from the time they first introduced its summary of
economic projections. That rate is down 1 basis point in the last six
years.
"The market is penciling in a potential policy mistake by the Fed,
wherein it hikes rates too aggressively near term and is unable to hike
past 1.4%," said Gennadiy Goldberg, senior rates strategist, at TD
Securities in New York.
"The recent price action is indicative of worries that Omicron will set
back the recovery and will allow the Fed to moderate rate hikes," he
added, referring to the highly-transmissible coronavirus variant.
On Wednesday, the Fed flagged three interest rate increases in 2022 and
another three in 2023, with the policy rate climbing to 2.1% in 2024.
The Fed typically lifts its benchmark rate higher until the economy is
able to run on its own without any monetary policy action, typically
hitting or exceeding what is known as the "equilibrium rate".
The previous Fed rate hike cycle in 2018 peaked at 2.25%-2.5%.
"The Fed waited too long, certainly in our opinion, to wait for
inflation to get here and fight it," said David Petrosinelli, managing
director and senior trader at broker-dealer InspereX in New York.
"Because they're running behind on inflation, the Fed has to raise rates
faster with more rate increases front-loaded in 2022. The fear is that
this is going to slow down the economy."
The U.S. Treasury yield curve typically bear flattens as the Fed shifts
toward tightening, with smaller rises in long-term than in short-term
yields. But recently, long-term U.S. Treasury yields have dropped from
already very low levels, implying the historically low Fed terminal
rate.
[to top of second column] |
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell takes his seat to testify
before a Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee hearing
on “The Semiannual Monetary Policy Report to the Congress” on
Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., July 15, 2021. REUTERS/Kevin
Lamarque/File Photo
"Perhaps this outcome reflects the limits to how much the Fed can tighten in a
heavily-indebted, pandemic world," said R.J. Gallo, senior portfolio manager at
Federated Hermes with assets under management.
DECLINING BOND YIELDS
The decline U.S. long-term yields has baffled market participants given a
backdrop of persistent inflation pressure, stronger and tighter labor market, as
well the Fed's tapering of its bond buying.
Jonathan Cohen, head of rates trading strategy at Credit Suisse in New York,
said the decline in yields could be attributed, in part, to supply-demand
factors, which include rapid buying of U.S. Treasuries by banks, the reduction
in available supply even after accounting for Fed tapering, and the de-risking
of pension funds as they gravitate toward bonds.
Since late November, U.S. 10-year yields have declined by more than 30 basis
points and was last down at 1.397%. U.S. 30-year yields, meanwhile, have fallen
more than 20 basis points and last traded at 1.824%.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell said on Wednesday though that he's not too "troubled"
about where the long bond is.
"It's not surprising that there's a lot of demand for U.S. sovereigns in a world
... a risk-free world ... where they're yielding so much more than Bunds or JGBs
(Japanese government bond," Powell added.
Still, some analysts believe the terminal rate is way too low and may well end
up higher than what markets expected.
"The risks to the hiking cycle are numerous. But it is important to stress they
are just that – namely, risks – and it seems strange for the Fed and markets to
be positioned for a risk scenario," said Andrea Cicione, head of strategy at TS
Lombard.
"In our view, it is more likely that the Fed and markets will move toward the
economic reality once risks fail to materialize."
(Reporting by Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss; Editing by Alden Bentley and Nick
Zieminski)
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