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Fed Finds Itself in Lose-Lose Situation Ahead of Next Week's Big FOMC Meeting

Published 03/17/2023, 04:59 AM
Updated 11/14/2023, 07:35 AM
  • The Federal Reserve holds its highly anticipated March FOMC policy meeting next week against an increasingly uncertain economic backdrop.
  • The U.S. central bank is widely expected to raise interest rates by 0.25% and signal that further moves are on hold for the time being.
  • As such, I believe Powell and company are on track to commit a major policy error as they relent on their hawkish stance.
  • Markets have once again changed their mind about what they think the Federal Reserve will do next week regarding interest rates as cracks begin to appear in the financial system.

    The U.S. central bank’s original plan to potentially raise rates by another 50 basis points at the conclusion of its March 21-22 meeting has been thrown into question in the past week due to growing signs of turmoil in the global banking sector.

    After odds for a half-point rate hike spiked to almost 80% following Fed chief Jerome Powell's hawkish congressional testimony on Wednesday, March 8, those bets evaporated in just a few days, with chances of a 50bps move plunging to under 2% by the morning of Monday, March 13.Implied Policy Rate Vs. Number of Hikes/Cuts Priced in

    Source: Bloomberg

    Essentially, what we saw was a historic repricing of rate hike bets as more banking turmoil emerged, with traders shifting pricing to indicate that the U.S. central bank may potentially hold the line this month. The probability for no Fed action next week briefly shot up to as high as 65% by Wednesday morning, then fell back to about 22% as of Thursday’s market close.

    The latest moves suggested a 78% likelihood of a 0.25 percentage point move, according to the Investing.com Fed Rate Monitor Tool. That would put the Fed funds target in a range between 4.75% and 5.00%.
    Fed Rate Monitor Tool

    Source: Investing.com

    Either way, market sentiment has shifted.

    Fed chair Powell had been widely signaling a 50bps hike in the lead-up to the March FOMC meeting, but worsening fears about the health of the financial sector in the past week paved the way for a more restrained view for monetary policy.

    Some investors believe the Fed’s aggressive rate hike cycle has led to cracks in the financial system. As the chart below demonstrates, history shows that the Fed’s monetary tightening campaigns tend to have a negative impact on the global financial system.
    U.S. Fed Funds Rate
    Source: BofA/Bloomberg

    As the U.S. central bank raises rates, things in the financial system start to “break”, often resulting in a crisis. We had the Latin American debt crisis of the 1980s, the Long-Term Capital Management hedge fund crisis in 1998, the tech bubble bursting in 2000, and the U.S. subprime housing crisis of 2007.

    In this case, U.S. regional banks have been under intense pressure since last week, following the swift closures of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank, the second-and third-largest failures in U.S. history.

    Then came news that Credit Suisse may need a bailout after a major Saudi investor said it would not provide more capital to troubled Swiss lender due to regulatory issues. That forced the Swiss National Bank to step in on Thursday morning with a $54 billion lifeline to help shore up liquidity conditions.

    Banking sector turmoil continued Thursday afternoon after a group of the largest U.S. financial institutions, including JPMorgan Chase (NYSE:JPM), Bank of America (NYSE:BAC), Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS), and Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS), came to the rescue of embattled First Republic Bank (NYSE:FRC) in the form of $30 billion in uninsured deposits to help stabilize the lender.

    My take is that whatever the Fed does, it’s in a lose-lose ‘damned if you do and damned if you don’t’ situation. The U.S. central bank appears to be walking a tightrope, with the potential for a major policy error at each side.

    • No Change (21.8%): If the Fed were to fold under the pressure and keeps rates unchanged next week due to strains in the financial sector it would put into serious question its resolve to bring persistently high inflation back under control. Additionally, the damage to the central bank’s credibility would be unprecedented, especially after Powell stated numerous times that rates would have to stay higher for longer to battle inflation.
    • 25BPS Hike (78.2%): While a quarter-point move would make the most sense at this point in time, the fact that the Fed may relent on its previous hawkish stance would put policymakers in a tough spot, especially with inflation still running well above the central bank’s 2%-target. This too could leave the Fed at risk of easing policy just as inflationary pressures begin to reaccelerate.
    • 50BPS Hike (0%): A 50bps rate hike won't do the Fed much good either, with such an aggressive move likely to add to ‘hard-landing’ fears for the economy consisting of a deep and prolonged recession. As such, the U.S. central bank would likely face criticism for making such a large move, considering signs of mounting stress in the banking sector.

    My personal inclination is that Powell and company will decide to raise rates by 25bps at the upcoming meeting and signal that further hikes are on hold for the time being. That would effectively end the Fed’s year-long monetary tightening cycle, considering the troubling circumstances in the global financial system.

    In addition, I believe policymakers will note that they are watching signs of more instability across the financial sector very carefully, with Powell ready to provide further liquidity measures if necessary.

    As seen below, the Fed’s balance sheet ballooned by $297 billion this week, undoing four months of quantitative tightening, as emergency loans to cash-strapped banks spiked to a new record.Fed Balance SheetSource: St. Louis Fed

    After a strong start to the year in January, the major U.S. averages have seen their rally melt away, with the blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average now down -2.4% on the year.

    Meanwhile, the benchmark S&P 500 and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite have trimmed their year-to-date gains to +3.6% and +15.2% respectively, having pulled back from their 2023 highs reached in early February.
    Nasdaq, S&P 500, Dow YTD Price Chart

    As always, long-term investors should remain patient, and alert to opportunity amid another expected bout of Fed-induced volatility next week.

    ***

    Disclosure: At the time of writing, I am long on the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the S&P 500, and the Nasdaq 100 via the SPDR Dow ETF (DIA), the SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY), and the Invesco QQQ Trust ETF (QQQ). I am also long on the Technology Select Sector SPDR ETF (NYSE:XLK). I regularly rebalance my portfolio of individual stocks and ETFs based on ongoing risk assessment of both the macroeconomic environment and companies' financials. The views discussed in this article are solely the opinion of the author and should not be taken as investment advice.

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Latest comments

Fed funds are insignificant when the fed is expanding its halance sheet at 800mph.
like how this guy blames the Saudis for failing to bail out CS by throwing more good money after bad, such is the change in MSM towards the country
Fed creates problems with money printing and they figure more printing money will solve the problem money printing caused?!
Banks are collapsing because the Fed has rendered their collateral worth much less, and you want them to keep cranking? OK Jesse
S&P 3200 is in the cards, perfect short trade setup on the next bounce to 3950, for the cautious wait until Friday or this Monday's low gets taken out. We are due for a bounce soon, as it is oversold at the moment. The next leg down will be nasty.
I have zero sympathy for Powell. The Fed infused $6 trillion into the reckoning while holding rates near zero. Their policy decisions are the primary reason for the current conundrum. As usual, the average person will ultimately pay the price.
Too low, too long and too high, too fast.
I am decorated, I am a new trainee, so I am a beginner in trading
Hi
In this situation, factors other than interest rates will cause inflation to decline. See oil.
Impossible task, it’s either the small man or the big guy that gets the mean weenie
Bitcoin, duh
The Fed cannot raise further without more Bank carnage. Treasury rates have already dropped, signaling a pause.
I think people just forget one fundamental thing:" The central bank does not exist to serve the Wall Street ONLY".  When I was shopping for groceries, I saw people were hesitating before the shelves, especially the seniors, I felt their pain.  When people are judging the Federal Reserve for raising the interest rates, they only focus on their portfolio, but not the overall economy and the people.  Our system needs to be fixed and reset to be a little bit more tolerable, though I know it will never be.
Seniors are pausing at the shelves because they rely on their retirement funds to pay for those groceries. The impact on Wallstreet impacts seniors the most.
so they caved on tightening and probably pausing soon 🤔
Good reporting- nice charts - and easy too read. The fed is lost . They kept the QE and zero interest rates for way too long. Why? Why did they not tighten much much earlier? Now they are back to QE at night and hiking at the same time. Lol. What a bunch of baffoons.
Fed is supposed to act totally independent of the US gov. At the beginning of Powell’s term , he stated that several times. Keep blaming trump . It’s all you have.
  Since when has Trump ever done what he's supposed to, like respecting Fed indepence?  And that wasn't all I said.  I made 2 points.  ;-)
Trump put Powell in place. So....
It is not the FED that creates these debacles.  They are the police and are bound to follow their mandate. No one complained during the Pandemic when they dropped money out of helicopters.  It is the rules and regulations that were destroyed setting us back to the roaring 20's greed and corruption stage. I warned and predicted this as a given considering our mindset for 40 years was disinflation. We are about to enter another period in time i dare to suggest.
Many knew what the government and Fed did in response to the government shutting down the economy would not end well. They were just ignored. Just like the guys that warned about Madoff.
  That "shutting down" reduced the severity & duration of the pandemic.  Would've been even milder if retrumplicans weren't politicizing people to not protect themselves (w/ masks, distancing, vaccines, etc.), and to inject disinfectants & take livestock de-wormer instead..
US stock market liquidity are still very strong.....its the greedy blood sucking bank thats having financial crisis...
The Fed won't stop raising rates as he's funding the war in Ukraine. 165-billion has already been sent to Ukraine. Wars are always inflationary--WWI, WWII, Korea, Vietnam. Russia invaded Ukraine, February 24, 2022. The Fed began raising rates March 17, 2022--3-weeks after the war kicked off. He didn't raise rates from January 2020 to January 2022. When the war kicked off, he raised rates. Powell knows that all wars are highly inflationary.
Russia is spending way more money (and lives) in Ukraine than the US is.
The more the US spends now, the less the US will have to spend later to defend against Russia.
It's pretty clear that no one really knows what the FED will do.
What the Fed will do depends on how the situation develops
so they are awaiting that it gets worse?
exactly
I feel your pain from last week. I havent switched to long yet… but it’s probably coming as fed switches back to QE prematurely. We just found out 300 billion was printed last week to save these banks. Too big to fail. Im so skeptical about the whole system.
Plan on hyperinflation and see how that ends for the average man on the street
Thank you for your article. I do not expect much volatility next week, as 25bps is on the table. This would suffice for FED not to lose already very low credibility and for markets to start a strong rally (easing is coming sooner than later). Bond market and DXY also pointing to the end of QT and hiking cycle. The only concern I have in the long run that this kind of ping pong policy might not end well: more banks will fall as damage is there, however will be bailed in with another 300b injection, and inflation might strike back.
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