USD: In need of some Powell "magic"
Yesterday’s US inflation reading made the Federal Reserve's job even harder as it prepares to announce another rate hike at 1900 GMT today. Core CPI dropped to 6.0% year-on-year, and headline to 7.1% in November, prompting a new round of dovish speculation on the Fed’s rate path. As discussed here by James Knightley, we are not changing our call for a 50bp hike today, but the chances of the peak rate reaching 5.0% have admittedly shrunk.
The market’s pricing for today’s announcement has also remained anchored to 50bp, and it’s fair to believe that investors’ reaction will be primarily driven by the forward-looking language of the statement and of Powell’s press conference.
Our perception is that the Fed will want to deliver some sort of “rate protest”, essentially pushing back against the recent easing in financial conditions. To do that, Powell will need to downplay the recent abatement in price pressure, stick to the view that the inflation battle is still to be won and ultimately try to re-anchor peak rate expectations to the 5.00% handle. That is easier said than done.
The unsuccessful reiteration of “transitory inflation” in 2021 served as a lesson to the Fed, and now warns against abandoning rate hikes too early or sticking too long to the notion that inflation isn’t yet on a reliable downward path. So, Powell will have to walk the fine line between credibility risk and the Fed’s explicit preference to overdeliver rather than underdeliver on policy tightening.
While we are in the camp of higher interest rates and a stronger dollar, we have to admit the risk of wanted or unwanted dovish mis-steps is elevated. We knew December would be a challenging month for dollar bulls like ourselves, and downside risks remain significant today. Still, our base case is that the dollar can recover some of the lost ground as Powell works his magic to deliver a broadly hawkish – and above all credible – message.
Francesco Pesole
|