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Yellen Pulls A Dove Out Of Fed's Hat

Published 03/29/2016, 01:58 PM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM
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As we noted yesterday, market volatility was expected to pick up as we moved through the week as top-tier data releases and traders at their desks gradually ramped up. Today we’re getting our first look at that phenomenon, with Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen making some waves at her speech to the Economic Club of New York.

Exceedingly Cautious

In typical Janet Yellen fashion, the chairwoman came off as exceedingly cautious on the outlook for the US economy [emphasis mine]:

  • Inflation expectations may have drifted lower; concerned by low inflation readings
  • The decline in some inflation indicators has heightened the risk that stable price expectations could be wrong
  • Committee should ‘proceed cautiously’ in raising interest rates
  • Caution “especially warranted” given low interest rates
  • Current neutral real interest rate likely close to zero
  • Fed “would still have considerable scope” to ease policy even if rates return to zero
  • Fed used non-conventional monetary policy tools in previous recovery, would do so again
  • The impact of global turmoil on the US is likely low, kept down interest-rate expectations
  • Further declines in oil prices could have “adverse” effects on the global economy
  • I couldn't have imagined 6-7 years ago we would still be employing similar policies
  • It would be certainly helpful to see fiscal policy play a larger role

Very Dovish

If the comments about “non-conventional monetary-policy tools” (read: another round of quantitative easing) and the potential for interest rates to return to zero didn’t tip you off, this is a very dovish statement. Though she is just one of many voting members of the FOMC, her views typically reflect the influential “core” of the Fed, so many traders are taking this as a sign that we may not see any further interest rate hikes in the US until 2017. Indeed, fed funds futures traders have revised down the implied probability of a June rate hike to just 28%, and “only” a 71% chance of another rate hike at all this year. In other words, the Fed’s interest-rate projections suggest that the central bank is back to wearing its rose-colored glasses on the US economy, at least relative to the market’s expectations.

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Market Impact

The market impact of the more-dovish-than-expected speech was sharp and immediate. The US dollar index fell by 0.6% in the immediate aftermath as traders pushed back their rate hike timelines, and this drop in the greenback helped just about every other major asset class. US equities have turned solidly higher after spending the morning in negative territory, the benchmark 10-year US treasury yield is now down 6 bps on the day (bonds are rising), and even gold and oil have caught a bid, though oil still remains in negative territory on the day.

Intraday traders should definitely make note of these moves, but the market’s focus will quickly shift toward the rest of this week’s data, including ADP employment tomorrow, a speech by BOE Governor Carney, Eurozone CPI figures and Chinese PMI figures on Thursday and of course, the critical US Nonfarm Payrolls report on Friday.

Latest comments

The Fed will never raise rates again. December was a mistake and the world market selloff in January verified it. At G20 there seems to have been a coordinated effort to stop the bleeding. This was clearly the catalyst needed to take the markets higher for now. great news for the market not so good news for the average person.
There's a snake coming to get the dove
It's apparent that she missed the chance of sell stocks she held last year or bought more stocks in recent sell-off. I can find no reason but this why she is so timid to normalize interest rates even two goals of Fed have nearly been achieved. Core CPI goes over 2.3% and unemployment went down to full employment level. I wonder what IS is doing not to eliminate the doves out of cages.
Markets matter more than policy. We have to look at real fundamentals, not at what policy makers want to happen. The willing disbelief of people can carry on for a while, but eventually it is overwhelmed by the market.
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