Analysis

Fed Baby Steps Coming: What's Powell Up To?

 

The odds of a double rate cut in September plunged from 40% recently to 31% last week then to 0% today.

Bond Market Screaming for Cuts

 

Yield Synopsis

  • Despite a yield rally on the 30-year bond from 1.98% to 2.10% the yield curve is still inverted out to 30 years.
  • The 2s10s inverted again today.
  • The 5sFF inversion is a whopping 62.5 basis points.

Effectively, the bond market is screaming for fast, deep cuts. Yet the CME Fedwatch chart shows that traders have thrown in the towel on big, fast cuts.

What Happened?

The Fed effectively jawboned expectations of cuts lower.

Lot More Going On

Negative Rates Damage Banks

Screwing Up the Economy

Wolf Richter explains How Negative Interest Rates Screw Up the Economy.

Divided Fed

The New York Times reports Fed Was Divided About Interest Rate Cut

Federal Reserve officials were sharply divided when they voted to cut interest rates for the first time in a decade in late July, newly released minutes from their meeting show.

Notes from the gathering, released Wednesday, show that “a couple” of participants at the meeting — not all of whom get to vote on monetary policy — would have preferred a half-point cut in the federal funds rate to shore up inflation.

But “several” wanted to hold rates steady, noting a strong job market and low unemployment. Two Fed officials voted against the decision to cut.

What's Going On Follow Up

Let's return to Randy Woodward's observation "I think there's a lot more going on than just rate hikes. Sooner or later he's going to make it clear he wants to have the ability to go negative."

I agree wholeheartedly with Woodward's first sentence. The second sentence is debatable.

The Fed is in many ways clueless. They will never see themselves as being any part of the problem.

But But But

Please note the policy difference between the Fed and the ECB.

  1. The Fed paid interest on excess reserves, thereby bailing out US banks slowly over time.
  2. The ECB with negative interest rates further crushed European banks

I have commented on that aspect many times.

Wolf Richter and Daniel Lacalle made similar observations.

Compared to the ECB the Fed Isn't Clueless

No matter how one slices things, the Fed's actions have been less damagingthan the ECB's.

The Fed cannot come out and blame the ECB for stupidity, but it can attempt to jawbone expectations of big cuts lower, even as the ECB is touting more and more intervention.

What good did negative interest rates do for either Japan or the ECB?

Reflections on Errors

It's easier to spot the errors of others than the errors you make.

It's possible that at least some Fed members see the damage of the ECB's actions.

If so, the correct Fed response is "baby steps".

With a bit of poetic license, I have a musical tribute.

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