|

Fed Preview: Sticking to the script - ING

According to James Knightley, Chief International Economist at ING, a strong domestic story of the US economy means the Federal Reserve will continue to signal “gradual” rate hikes ahead, setting us up for a December move and then three more hikes in 2019.

Key Quotes

“Given the Fed raised interest rates at the last meeting in September, today’s FOMC announcement will see a “no change” outcome, but the tone of the accompanying press release will point strongly to a December rate move.”

“After all, the economy is booming. GDP growth is set to hit 3% this year, the fastest rate of expansion for 13 years, while wages are rising at their fastest rate for nine years and the unemployment rate is the lowest it has been for 48 years.”

“At the same time inflation is at or above target on all of the key measures the Fed watches. The Fed may have dropped the line that monetary policy “remains accommodative” at the September FOMC meeting, but the policy is a long way off being regarded as restrictive given these metrics.”

“We certainly agree with the December rate rise – new economic forecasts will be published and Fed Chair Jerome Powell gives another press conference to explain the rationale.”

“We also continue to predict a rate hike in each of the first three quarters of 2019. However, we think that will bring an end to the Fed’s policy tightening.”

“Slower growth outside the US will also act as a brake and with Tuesday’s mid-term elections set to return a split Congress - the prospect of additional fiscal support will fade. This will take the pressure off the Fed to continue hikes into 2020.”

Author

Sandeep Kanihama

Sandeep Kanihama

FXStreet Contributor

Sandeep Kanihama is an FX Editor and Analyst with FXstreet having principally focus area on Asia and European markets with commodity, currency and equities coverage. He is stationed in the Indian capital city of Delhi.

More from Sandeep Kanihama
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD trims gains, hovers around 1.1900 post-US data

EUR/USD trades slightly on the back foot around the 1.1900 region in a context dominated by the resurgence of some buying interest around the US Dollar on turnaround Tuesday. Looking at the US docket, Retail Sales disappointed expectations in December, while the ADP 4-Week Average came in at 6.5K.

GBP/USD comes under pressure near 1.3680

The better tone in the Greenback hurts the risk-linked complex on Tuesday, prompting GBP/USD to set aside two consecutive days of gains and trade slightly on the defensive below the 1.3700 mark. Investors, in the meantime, keep their attention on key UK data due later in the week.

Gold loses some traction, still above $5,000

Gold faces some selling pressure on Tuesday, surrendering part of its recent two-day advance although managing to keep the trade above the $5,000 mark per troy ounce. The daily pullback in the precious metal comes in response to the modest rebound in the US Dollar, while declining US Treasury yields across the curve seem to limit the downside.

XRP holds $1.40 amid ETF inflows and stable derivatives market

Ripple trades under pressure, with immediate support at $1.40 holding at the time of writing on Tuesday. A recovery attempt from last week’s sell-off to $1.12 stalled at $1.54 on Friday, leading to limited price action between the current support and the resistance.

Dollar drops and stocks rally: The week of reckoning for US economic data

Following a sizeable move lower in US technology Stocks last week, we have witnessed a meaningful recovery unfold. The USD Index is in a concerning position; the monthly price continues to hold the south channel support.

Bitcoin Cash trades lower, risks dead-cat bounce amid bearish signals

Bitcoin Cash (BCH) trades in the red below $522 at the time of writing on Tuesday, after multiple rejections at key resistance. BCH’s derivatives and on-chain indicators point to growing bearish sentiment and raise the risk of a dead-cat bounce toward lower support levels.