Investors back off view that Fed could raise rates in late 2022
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[May 08, 2021] By
Kate Duguid and Ann Saphir
(Reuters) -U.S. investors who had been
betting the Fed would raise rates as early as the end of next year
abruptly retreated from those positions on Friday after a disappointing
April employment report and now see the earliest the Fed might tighten
roughly two years away.
The push back in expectations for when the Fed might start raising rates
also means any reduction in the pace of its bond buying - which the Fed
has said will begin first - may also occur later than some investors had
been betting.
April's employment growth came in far short of expectations, probably
restrained by a shortage of workers and raw materials even as demand
improved rapidly. It would be hard to argue it stands as "substantial
further progress" toward maximum employment, the test the Fed has said
it must achieve before it begins dialing back its massive support for
the economy.
"It was a rude awakening. It could be what the Fed is worried about,
that we're going to continue to see uneven numbers and it's not just
going to be smooth sailing," said George Goncalves, head of U.S. macro
strategy at MUFG.
Following April's meeting, investors were betting the Fed would raise
rates in late 2022 or early 2023 and would offer clues about tapering
its $120 million in monthly asset purchases as soon as June 2021.
U.S. interest rate futures on Friday, however, showed that traders
pushed out expectations of a rate hike by roughly three months after
Friday morning's payrolls report. Eurodollar futures, a proxy for
interest rate expectations, showed a 90% chance of an interest rate hike
in March 2023, and fully priced in a hike in June 2023. Prior to the
report, investors were betting there was a 90% chance of a hike in
December 2022, and a 100% chance in March 2023.
Goncalves said that "we would probably need two to three more months
like this to push back tapering."
Investors still see the Fed needing to lay out a roadmap to tapering.
Rick Rieder, BlackRock’s chief investment officer of global fixed
income, said in a note that conditions "argue for at least beginning to
lay out a plan for asset purchase tapering, even if the Fed is more
likely to hold off on this transition for now."
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The Federal Reserve Board building on Constitution Avenue is
pictured in Washington, U.S., March 27, 2019. REUTERS/Brendan
McDermid
The change in interest rate expectations brings the market more in line with the
Fed's dovish approach to the coronavirus pandemic recovery. Though economic data
has been improving, the Fed has said it has no plans to raise rates until
maximum employment is achieved.
"I don't believe this report changes the calculus of Powell or the core FOMC,"
said Gregory Whiteley, portfolio manager at DoubleLine Capital.
"The Fed is looking for maximum employment. They've said it will take quite a
while to get there. Today reinforces that idea - although a lack of strong GDP
growth does not appear to be behind today's disappointment."
TD Securities strategist Penglu Zhao wrote in a note on Friday that speculators
had last week piled into bearish bets on Treasury prices, on the expectation of
a stellar payrolls print.
Commodity Futures Trading Commission data released on Friday showed that
speculative positioning in U.S. 10-year Treasury futures flipped from a net long
of 55,759 contracts to a net short of minus 7,245 contracts in the week through
May 4.
Shorter-dated Treasury yields, which move with expectations of interest rates,
fell in the wake of the report. The two-year yield, dropped to its lowest level
since March, before recovering somewhat, last down 1 basis points to 0.147%.
Yields at the long end of the Treasury curve initially fell following the
report, but quickly recovered. The 10-year yield, after hitting the lowest level
since March 4, retraced the move to last trade at 1.579%, flat on the day.
Goncalves argued that the recovery in longer-dated yields was in anticipation of
auctions of new 10- and 30-year bonds next week.
(Reporting by Kate Duguid and Ann Saphir; additional reporting by Gertrude
Chavez-DreyfussEEditing by Tony Chopra, Peter Graff and Diane Craft)
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