Analysis-Investors shun risk as Fed pushes higher-for-longer rates
						
		 
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		 [August 27, 2022]  By 
		Davide Barbuscia and Carolina Mandl 
		 
		NEW YORK (Reuters) - Investors are bracing 
		for higher interest rates for longer and hunkering down with defensive 
		portfolios which shun high equities risk, as U.S. Federal Reserve Chair 
		Jerome Powell on Friday cautioned against expecting a swift undo of its 
		rate tightening. 
		 
		Market participants had been awaiting Powell's speech at the central 
		bank's annual symposium in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, as they looked for 
		clues on how the Fed plans to balance its inflation-fighting plans with 
		a flexible approach more dependent on economic data, hoping the central 
		bank can avoid tipping the economy into a deep recession. 
		 
		"We probably are going to remain defensive on equities and 
		equity-related hedge fund managers until mid-November," said Brooks 
		Ritchey, co-CIO at K2 Advisors, which manages a $12-billion fund of 
		hedge funds. "The bond market seems to be well-adjusted to Powell's 
		thinking ... Equities seem to be still adjusting to this new central 
		bank policy cycle." 
		 
		Equities tumbled after Powell's brief speech, lasting less than ten 
		minutes. The S&P 500 slid more than 2% and the Nasdaq Composite was down 
		nearly 3%.  
		  
						
		
		  
						
		 
		"For me, having cash reserves is a very comforting place to be," said 
		David Kotok, Chairman & Chief Investment Officer Cumberland Advisors, 
		who is predicting that stocks will have to adjust downwards to the 
		higher rates still coming.  
		 
		"I've been in 'higher for longer' for months," said Kotok, who said he 
		was in the highest cash position in his U.S. equity ETF portfolio that 
		he's been in.  
		 
		Jason Ware, chief investment officer for Albion Financial Group has also 
		been pivoting more conservatively in the expectation of higher chances 
		of a looming recession: "We have been slowly, incrementally becoming 
		more defensive over the last few weeks on the equity side."  
		 
		Powell said historical records cautioned "strongly" against loosening 
		policy prematurely but remained noncommittal about the size of the 
		interest rate increase the Fed will approve at its Sept. 20-21 meeting. 
		 
		Treasury yields spiked after the speech, with the two-year note yield 
		briefly hitting its highest level since October 2007 before falling 
		back. 
		 
		Fed funds futures traders priced in higher odds of a 75 basis points 
		interest rate hike at the Sept. 20-21 policy-making meeting, while bets 
		were more skewed towards a 50 basis points hike before the speech.  
		 
		Interest rate futures currently have rates reaching a plateau around 
		March, and remaining at that level for a longer period than had been 
		seen in late July.  
		 
		There is some pricing in the market for no more than a quarter point cut 
		by the end of 2023 - although that's a shift from a month ago when at 
		least two were priced in. Contracts that far out are far less liquid 
		than near-term ones.  
						
		
		  
						
		
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            Traders work on the floor of the New 
			York Stock Exchange (NYSE) as a screen shows Federal Reserve Board 
			Chairman Jerome Powell during a news conference following a Fed rate 
			announcement, in New York City, U.S., July 27, 2022. REUTERS/Brendan 
			McDermid/ 
            
			  
Brendan Murphy, Head of Global Fixed Income, North America, Insight Investment, 
Boston said he does not see the Fed cutting rates next year.  
 
"I don't think they will be doing that," Murphy said.  
 
Jason Pride, Chief Investment Officer of Private Wealth at Glenmede, said market 
expectations that the Fed could soon halt or even reverse monetary tightening 
had been unrealistic, and that the central bank will remain determined to fight 
price pressures even if that comes at an economic cost. 
 
"We've started de-risking much earlier in the year .. Mainly on our perspective 
that the Fed is likely to cause a recession with these actions, out of 
necessity," he said.  
 
Sonal Desai, Chief Investment Officer of Franklin Templeton Fixed Income said 
she would remain risk-averse in her portfolio, maintaining low its sensitivity 
to interest rate changes, with short-duration bets. 
 
"What I heard from Powell is one of the most unequivocal statements about the 
fact that inflation is too high, which we all know, but more importantly the Fed 
is going to keep rates high," said Desai. 
 
'STILL A LONG WAY TO GO' 
 
The U.S. central bank has raised its benchmark overnight interest rate by 225 
basis points since March but the rapid tightening of financial conditions has 
led investors to weigh inflation concerns against recessionary fears - two 
opposing narratives that have caused wild price swings across asset classes this 
year. 
 
Powell's speech comes after a summer market rally driven by expectations that 
the central bank would slow down the pace of rate hikes and potentially reverse 
to rate cuts early next year due to emerging evidence of a slowdown in economic 
activity and a possible peak in rising price pressure. 
 
Those views were strengthened when, in the minutes of the July policy meeting 
released earlier this month, the Fed said it saw "little evidence" that 
inflation pressures had eased but that it recognized the risk it might tighten 
too much and curb economic activity. 
  
Many in the market, however, had remained skeptical that a so-called Fed pivot 
could happen anytime soon. 
 
"I think the Fed will need to keep up the hawkish forward guidance for the time 
being because even if inflation is moving in the right direction there's still a 
long way to go," said Jeff MacDonald, Head of Fixed-Income Strategies at 
Fiduciary Trust International.  
 
(Reporting by Davide Barbuscia, Carolina Mandl; additional reporting by Alden 
Bentley and Mehnaz Yasmin; additional reporting and editing by Megan Davies; 
Editing by Nick Zieminski) 
				 
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