Dovish Fed minutes extend market rally, likely to the dismay of officials
Markets got the dovish headlines out of the Federal Open Market Committee minutes they needed to rally further – a “substantial majority” judged that slowing the pace of hikes “would soon be appropriate”. Together with the dismal PMI readings earlier in the session this has helped put a brake to the curve flattening, though, as the front to intermediate maturities caught up.
The overall takeaway looks more nuanced, and not too different than what could be gleaned from recent official statements about the general rate trajectory – “various” Fed officials did see rates peaking at a higher level than previously thought. In their discussion officials also noted that the full effect of tightening financial conditions would take longer to feed through to inflation, though there was great uncertainty about the lags. That itself could well be seen as justifying a slowing pace of further policy tightening after what has been delivered already.
Financial conditions have already started to loosen again
However to the degree that markets are running ahead of themselves and financial conditions have already started to loosen again, it is unlikely this is the broader message the Fed wants to send just yet. While the meeting pre-dates the latest positive surprise in the inflation data, officials since then were quick to note that one CPI reading alone is not yet a trend. Yes the PMIs were bad, but other data is showing more resilience with a clear focus near term on next week's job market data.