Uh, Oh, investors start to speculate on September 20 Dot Plot from the Fed

Uh, Oh, investors start to speculate on September 20 Dot Plot from the Fed

U.S. stocks fell today, Wednesday, on a stronger-than-expected, Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) for the service sector. The reading raised fears that the Federal Reserve, which is generally expected to keep interest rates steady at its September 20 meeting, will not move quickly to reduce rates. The odds of an interest rate INCREASE at the Fed’s November 1 meeting rose to 47.2% on the CME FedWatch Tool from 42% yesterday.

Fed bumps interest rates up another 25 basis points, says future increase “depends on the data”

Fed bumps interest rates up another 25 basis points, says future increase “depends on the data”

The Federal Reserve raised its benchmark short-term interest rate 25 basis points to 5.25% to 5.50%. The central bank said that further interest rates are likely, but that the timing of any rate increases was contingent on data showing how the economy is reacting to interest rate increases so far. Fed Chair Jerome Powell made it clear that there is more work ahead to bring in inflation down to the Fed’s target of 2%. But he also made it clear that the timing of any future moves will depend on of data over the coming weeks and months. “We think we need to stay on task,” Powell said

Please Watch My New YouTube Video: Remember the Quiet Period

Please Watch My New YouTube Video: Remember the Quiet Period

Today’s video is Remember the Quiet Period. Don’t panic. There have been a lot of announcements coming from the Fed recently but it’s not because there’s a new crisis or a huge event brewing. It’s simply that the window of time when the Fed can speak is about to close. The Fed has to go quiet twelve days before the July meeting, so right now, they’re trying to make it very clear to the market that a 25 basis point raise is likely in July. On Monday, three Fed officials, Michael Barr, Mary Daly and Loretta Mester discussed the need for another rate hike–possibly two. We’ll be entering the Fed’s quiet period on Saturday, July 15. Looking at the CME FedWatch, on July 11, the market believed there was a 92.4% chance we’ll get a rate hike on July 26. On the same date, the market thought the odds were only at 22.2% for a 25 basis point increase at the meeting on September 20. It sounds like the Fed has made their intentions clear for the July 26 meeting, and the market won’t be shocked by a rate hike on that date. September 20? Hmmm.

Fed bumps interest rates up another 25 basis points, says future increase “depends on the data”

Yesterday’s CPI inflation report created a huge dilemma for the Federal Reserve (and your portfolio)–here’s what to watch

Yesterday, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that all-items inflation rose at just a 3% annual rate in June. That was a huge drop from the 4% annual rate reported in May. The inflation numbers immediately prompted Wall Street to, again, declare that the Federal Reserve’s cycle of interest rate increases would end “soon.” “Soon” is now defined as after the Fed’s July 26 meeting. Fed officials have been so adamant in recent days about the need for more interest rate increases that the odds of 25 basis point increase at the July 26 meeting barely budged after the June CPI report. Today the CME FedWatch Took, which calculates the odds of a Fed move by looking at prices in the Fed Funds Futures market (and is, thus, a measure of investor sentiment rather than speculation on Fed thinking) puts the odds of a July 26 25 basis point increase at 92.4%. That’s down only slightly from the 94.2% odds before the CPI inflation report. The big move has been in the odds for a second 25 basis point increase at the Fed’s September 20 meeting. Today, the odds are just 11.1%. That’s down from 13.2% odds of a 25 basis point move in September on July 12. And down big from 27.5% odds of another interest rate increase in September on July 6. And there’s the Fed’s problem.

Huge surge in ADP jobs for June likely means a big surprise on full June jobs report tomorrow

Huge surge in ADP jobs for June likely means a big surprise on full June jobs report tomorrow

Earlier this week economists were projecting the official government jobs report due on Friday, that is tomorrow, would show that the U.S. economy added just 200,000 jobs in June. This morning, however, the ADP Research Institute’s survey of private employers showed the economy added 497,000 jobs in June. That’s more than twice the 220,000 gain that economists had projected for this report. And way above the 267,000 jobs reported by this survey in May.

Uh, Oh, investors start to speculate on September 20 Dot Plot from the Fed

What does the Federal Reserve have to do to slow the U.S. consumer?

This morning all the way in New York I could hear the gnashing of teeth from Jerome Powell’s office at the Federal Reserve. “What do we have to do to slow consumer spending in the Untied States?” he cried after this morning’s economic data. Today the Commerce Department sharply raised its judgement on first quarter GDP growth. The last revision to the data showed the U.S. economy growing at a 2% annual rate from January through March. That was a huge step up from the 1.3% growth repoRrted in the previous GDP estimate.

What comes after Goldilocks?

What comes after Goldilocks?

Investors and traders have been riding a Goldilocks market that has rested on a belief that all news is good news. There are signs that belief is facing challenges that might, just might, lead to a replacement of Goldilocks with some other narrative. Right now, the golden child is still resting peacefully at the Three Bears’ house with a stomach full of “just right” porridge, but sentiment in the last week has at least been willing to countenance the possibility that some bad news is bad news. And, I can see a lurking suspicion in the market that may be in the weeks to come all news if bad news.

Fed bumps interest rates up another 25 basis points, says future increase “depends on the data”

Fed, as expected, holds interest rate steady–but oh, that jawboning

As expected, the Federal Reserve’s Open Market Committee held the central bank’s benchmark interest rate steady today at 5.0% to 5.25%. But the Fed in its meeting press release and Fed chair Jerome Powell’s press conference stressed that its inflation fight isn’t over. That the market could see another interest rate increase at the July 26 meeting. And that the market should not expect a pivot to interest rate cuts anytime soon.