Investors temper US rate cut bets as Fed meeting looms
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[January 24, 2024] By
Saqib Iqbal Ahmed
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A strong U.S. economy and pushback from central
bank officials is leading some investors to rethink their bets on how
quickly the Federal Reserve will cut rates this year, a shift that is
rippling through Treasury and foreign exchange markets even as stocks
sit near record highs.
Expectations that the Fed would ease monetary policy in 2024 after its
most aggressive tightening cycle in decades fueled an explosive rally in
stocks and bonds in the final months of last year, boosting the S&P 500
to an annual gain of more than 24%.
Investors still believe rate cuts are coming, but some have started to
question when the Fed will begin lowering borrowing costs and how
quickly it will move. While the S&P 500 has notched a fresh record high
this month, Treasuries have pared some of their gains and the dollar has
perked back up as a result.
Comments following the Fed’s Jan 30-31 policy meeting next week could
shed more light on how the central bank views the recent strength in the
economy and its timing for rate cuts.
"Markets seemed to be seeing the Fed through rose-colored glasses to end
2023," said Helen Given, FX trader at Monex USA in Washington. "With the
new year, price expectations have begun to shift."
A dovish pivot at the Fed's monetary policy meeting in December
bolstered investor hopes that the central bank's tightening cycle was
over and rate cuts were approaching.
More recently, several officials have pushed back against the perception
that monetary policy easing is imminent, saying they need more evidence
that inflation will return to the central bank's 2% target and stay at
that level before they commit to interest rate cuts. Evidence that areas
of the economy remain robust has supported that view.
As a result, investors now expect the Fed to deliver its first interest
rate cut in May, instead of March. Fed Funds futures on Tuesday implied
a 41% probability for at least one rate cut at the March Fed meeting,
down from 88% a month ago.
Among the data showing the economy’s resilience are December’s retail
sales and consumer prices, which rose more than expected in December.
Investors are awaiting another key inflation gauge, December's personal
consumption expenditures (PCE) reading, on Jan 26.
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The Charging Bull or Wall Street Bull is pictured in the
Manhattan borough of New York City, New York, U.S., January 16,
2019. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri/File Photo/File Photo
"Given the strength of both economic growth and wage growth, the Fed
still has to worry about the medium-term inflation outlook," wrote
Brian Rose, senior economist at UBS Global Wealth Management.
Financial conditions - a measure of the availability of funding in
the economy - eased sharply in late 2023 as stocks soared and bond
yields plunged.
Some investors have argued that financial conditions could become
too loose for the Fed’s comfort if yields keep falling, forcing the
central bank to keep rates elevated to prevent inflation from
rebounding.
The Goldman Sachs Financial Conditions Index stands at 99.39, not
far from the 16-month low of 99.21, touched in late December.
"Current economic conditions are far from those that have
historically precipitated rate cuts," said John Lynch, chief
investment officer for Comerica Wealth Management, in a Tuesday
report.
The stronger-than-expected economic data have buoyed Treasury
yields, which move inversely to bond prices. Yields on the benchmark
10-year U.S. Treasury are up some 35 basis points from their
December lows and recently stood at 4.1397. An expected flood of
Treasury issuance - seen nearly doubling to $2 trillion this year -
has also weighed on government bond prices.
The rise in yields has helped pull the dollar up against a basket of
currencies. The dollar index is up 2.3% this year, at a one-month
high after touching a five-month low in December.
Stocks, meanwhile, have kept climbing, though their ascent has
slowed in January. Following a 4.4% gain in December the S&P 500 is
up 1.7% this month, thanks to a rally in big technology and growth
stocks fueled in part by excitement over the prospects for
artificial intelligence.
However, “with the good news being priced in, and financial
conditions now at accommodative levels, it may be difficult to
maintain this optimism for long,” Deutsche Bank analysts wrote.
(Reporting by Saqib Iqbal Ahmed; Editing by Ira Iosebashvili and
Anna Driver)
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