Marketmind: A window into the Fed's thinking
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[October 11, 2023] (Reuters)
- A look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets by Amanda Cooper,
editor, finance and markets breaking news
Investors are always eager to get a look at the minutes from the Federal
Reserve's most recent policy meetings. They scour every line and often
every punctuation mark, for any sign of a shift in thinking. They might
be disappointed later on Wednesday when the minutes of the Federal Open
Market Committee's September meeting hit the wire.
In a statement after the Sept. 20 meeting, Chair Jerome Powell
reiterated the central bank's more hawkish monetary policy stance,
saying that although "people hate inflation", the jury was out on
whether the central bank's work in tackling price pressures was done.
Cue a rip higher in the dollar, gold getting battered and a rise in bond
yields.
Since then, however, Treasury yields have soared by a third of a
percentage point, with those on 30-year bonds poking above 5% for the
first time since August 2007 - an unwelcome development for homeowners,
seeing as the average mortgage is above 7.5%, the highest since late
2000.
The Fed has always been pretty clear about its intentions to raise rates
as high as needed for as long as needed to bring down inflation. But
October's rise in yields has been enough to prompt a number of
officials, even known hawks like Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan, to
suggest this might mean there is less need for the another rate hike in
the current cycle.
Consequently, yields are off those highs and strategists at ING at least
do not believe the mood is there to push them back up right now.
Geopolitical tensions are red hot, and, consumer inflation data for
September is a day away.
Policymakers' sense on how much the rise in bond yields might affect
broader credit conditions may not be reflected in today's minutes, not
least because at that point, 10-year Treasuries were a good 30 basis
points lower than now at 4.54%.
Borrowing costs and liquidity have tightened dramatically in the last
couple of years, as central banks, including the Fed have raised rates,
but also sold off their trillions of dollars in assets amassed as part
of their efforts to support their economies, first during the financial
crisis in 2008, and second, during the COVID pandemic 2020.
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Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in
New York City, U.S., August 29, 2023. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File
Photo
MARKETS IN 'UNCHARTED TERRITORY'
Deutsche Bank says the market is in uncharted territory in terms of
the shrinkage in central banks' balance sheets. In the roughly 15
years since the financial crisis, central banks have never sold
assets as quickly as they have in the last half-year.
Strategists at the bank estimate that process, known as quantitative
tightening, has accelerated to a pace of $750 billion in the last
six months, based on net asset sales of the Fed, the European
Central Bank, the Bank of England, the central banks of Australia,
Canada, New Zealand, Sweden and Japan.
While it is impossible to state with certainty what the implications
are, the bank says, it is possible to quantify the impact on the
market. Since the Fed kicked off QT (quantitative tightening) in
November 2021, the S&P 500 is around 8% lower and 10-year yields are
around 300 basis points higher.
Key developments that should provide more direction to U.S. markets
later on Wednesday:
* Producer Price Index September: 8.30 ET
* Ten-year Treasury note auction: 11.00 ET
* Minutes of the FOMC Sept. 20 meeting: 2.00 ET
(Editing by Bernadette Baum)
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