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Fed's Final Hike Unlikely as Economic Challenges Loom

Fed's Final Hike Unlikely as Economic Challenges Loom
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Table of contents

  1. A word on r*
    1. FOMC individual member expectations for longer run Fed funds rate
      1. Market rates more focused on where the Fed funds rate is in 2025. And liquidity excesses to tighten more in 2024
        1. Few reasons for dollar to hand back gains, yet

          We don't think the Fed will carry through with that final forecast hike. The combination of higher borrowing costs and less credit availability plus pandemic-era savings being exhausted and student loan repayments restarting should mean that households feel more of a financial squeeze in the fourth quarter and beyond. Rising credit card and auto loan delinquencies also hint at more pain with the Federal Reserve’s Beige Book warning that we may be in "the last stage of pent-up demand for leisure travel from the pandemic era".

          The concern is that economic softness could go too far (as highlighted by some officials in the July FOMC minutes) and heighten the chances of recession. Given this risk and the positive developments on inflation and labour costs, we think the Fed will be on hold for a number of months with the data flow gradually weakening the case for a November or December rate hike – which the market itself only gives around a 50:50 chance. Our base case continues to be more aggressive interest rate cuts through 2024 than suggested by the Fed and priced by financial markets.

           

          A word on r*

          There has been some chatter about the Fed adjusting its expectation for the long run forecast for what the Fed funds target rate should be, which would be a big story given the anchor this provides for longer dated Treasury yields. This has been put at 2.5% for quite some time, but as the graphic below shows we have started to see individuals nudge their own assessments higher. The momentum suggests it is only a matter of time before it does indeed change.

           

          FOMC individual member expectations for longer run Fed funds rate

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          Our own assessment is that it is likely to be closer to 3%. Fiscal policy has been loosened significantly under the Trump and Biden administrations and we don’t see that changing anytime soon – the Bloomberg consensus is for the US to run a fiscal deficit of 6% out to 2025. This will mean that monetary policy will need to be more restrictive in order to keep inflation under control. On top of this we have the so called “Triple D” of demographics, decarbonisation and deglobalisation, which will all keep upward pressure on inflation and interest rates.

          Regarding demographics, Baby boomers have been saving for retirement which has contributed to a glut of savings, driving down real interest rates. This process is ending as they liquidate the accumulated savings while shrinking birth rates means more competition for workers that could put upward pressure on wages.

          As for decarbonisation, switching from cheap and abundant fossil fuels to renewables is expensive and then there is the issue of storage and expanding the electrical grid. Energy bills are likely to be higher, which will increase costs throughout the economy. Then on deglobalisation – Covid, Russia-Ukraine, China-Taiwan have highlighted concerns about stability of global supply chains. Re-shoring and “friend-shoring” is now in vogue, but this will be disruptive and expensive, putting up costs.

          As such, we believe it is only a matter of time before the Fed formally declares that interest rates, over the longer term, will need to be higher than we experienced over the past 20 years.

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          Market rates more focused on where the Fed funds rate is in 2025. And liquidity excesses to tighten more in 2024

          The journey for market rates in recent weeks has been impacted by the reduction in the size of the rate cut discount as priced by the markets out to 2025. In that sense there has been some separation between delivery of Fed policy up front and direction for market rates, with market rates rising while the immediate Fed policy rate call has been broadly non-committal (the market discount). That said, the probability for a future rate hike has been on the rise of late, relative to a clearer discount for no change only a couple of week ago. Still, the bigger impact for longer tenor rates is dominated by how low the funds rate can get to when the Fed turns to cutting. Currently that is not much below 4%. We think that will be forced lower as the economy weakens. But it is where it is for now, and that’s helping to keep the 10yr Treasury yield well above 4%, with a tendency to test towards 4.5% (Fed funds low plus a 30-50bp term premium).

          In terms of liquidity circumstances, the Fed will acknowledge that the volume of cash going back to the Fed on the reverse repo facility has fallen to US$1.5tr; that’s down some US$1tr from its peak. It’s an important milestone, one that is an echo of the ongoing balance sheet roll-off of Treasuries and MBS from the Fed’s balance sheet (US$95bn per month). Interestingly bank (excess) reserves have not fallen, and in fact if anything they have risen some, now in the US$3.3tr area. This is comfortable, and indicative of ongoing ample liquidity conditions despite the ongoing (soft) quantitative tightening. The Fed might like to comment on this too, largely asserting that this is a good thing, where the falls in balances going into the Fed’s reverse repo facility is the more natural means to excesses exiting the system. The reverse facility has been doing its job, and as balances ease it implies less need for a job to be done. It will feel tighter when bank reserves fall, likely through 2024 and into 2025.

           

          Few reasons for dollar to hand back gains, yet

          The dollar is going into the September Fed meeting at the strongest levels since March. The concept of US ‘exceptionalism’ (both in growth and interest rates) looms large over the market and as yet there have been few reasons to bet against the dollar.

          The event risk of the September FOMC meeting does not seem a particularly bearish one for the dollar. As above, we are not expecting the Fed to call time on its tightening cycle. And by leaving one more hike in the dot plot, the Fed can avoid yields at the long end of the bond market slipping too far and providing premature stimulus. Indeed, the greater risk might be the Fed scaling down its dot plot median forecast of a 100bp easing cycle in 2024.

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          A hawkish September FOMC does not mean the dollar has to rally a lot. But assuming there are no surprises, it probably means ideas of a prolonged pause in the policy cycle will see interest rate volatility fall even further and demand for the carry trade stay strong. In practice, this could see USD/JPY work its way much closer to 150 and provoke Japanese authorities into intervention – as they did this time last year.

          Expect EUR/USD to trade on the soft side now that the ECB has told us that rates have peaked. However, we suspect good demand will emerge near the 1.05 level. Our house call is that US ‘exceptionalism’ does not last and that US growth converges on the weak eurozone story into 2024.

          Typically, November and December are seasonally weak months for the dollar. Our call is that weaker US activity data will become evident over time and that the current period will come to be viewed as ‘as good as it gets’ both for US growth and the dollar. We are sticking with our call that EUR/USD will be trading above 1.10 by year-end. 


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