Tag Archives: Federal Reserve Bank

U.S. Treasurys as traders look to PPI inflation data

Treasury yields fell on Tuesday as markets awaited the release of October’s producer price index figures and digested U.S. Federal Reserve speaker commentary.

At around 4:20 a.m. ET, the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury was down by around three basis points to 3.8367%. The 2-year Treasury yield was last at 4.3677% after declining by four basis points.

Yields and prices have an inverted relationship. One basis point is equivalent to 0.01%.

Traders looked ahead to the latest PPI figures which are due later in the day. The PPI reflects wholesale inflation by measuring how prices paid to producers for goods and services develop.

Markets are hoping that the data will provide more clarity on whether overall inflation is cooling, after consumer inflation figures released on Thursday hinted at this.

Fed Governor Christopher Waller suggested on Monday that last week’s data was only part of the bigger picture and other data points would have to be considered before drawing any conclusions.

He also indicated that the Fed would consider slowing rate hikes, but a pause to them is not imminent.

Federal Reserve Vice Chair Lael Brainard also hinted at a potential slowdown of rate hikes in remarks made on Monday.

Investors have been following Fed speaker comments closely as uncertainty about the central bank’s future policy and concerns about the pace of rate hikes leading the U.S economy into a recession have continued.

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Bond yields higher following market slumps, job data

U.S. Treasury yields traded higher on Tuesday as investors digested Monday’s market retreat and the previous week’s data releases that will guide the Federal Reserve’s policymaking.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note rose 6 basis points, trading at 3.9531% at around 5:30 a.m. ET. The yield on the 30-year Treasury bond climbed 7 basis points to 3.9173%. Yields move inversely to prices, and a basis point is equal to 0.01%.

The yield on the 2-year Treasury, the part of the curve most sensitive to Fed policy, was up by 2 basis points to 4.3329%.

The retreat from U.S. bonds appears to be picking up pace as commercial banks, pension funds and foreign governments step away, and the Fed increases the pace at which it plans to sell treasuries from its balance sheet. U.K. bonds are also seeing a dramatic slump as the Bank of England’s emergency move to purchase more gilts failed to calm markets.

Investors will be looking out for the data release on the NFIB (National Federation of Independent Business) Small Business Optimism Index on Tuesday, after the previous week’s release showed an unexpected decline in job openings, slower job growth than forecast and a lower-than-predicted unemployment rate.

The previously released data suggested a continued path of rate hiking for the Fed, which has contributed to recent days’ slides in the stock market.

The New York Fed will release its Survey of Consumer Expectations, which provides a look into consumer’s expectations for overall inflation and prices of food, housing and energy, as well as outlooks on earnings and jobs.

13-week and 26-week bonds are also due for auction Tuesday.

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Treasury yields tumble for a second day, with 10-year rate below 3.6%

Treasury yields fell across the board for a second day Tuesday as traders weigh actions from central banks going forward.

The benchmark 10-year Treasury was down 6 basis points to 3.587%, after having surpassed the 4% mark last week. The yield on the policy-sensitive 2-year Treasury fell 5 basis points to 4.045%.

Yields and prices move in opposite directions and one basis point equals 0.01%.

The moves appeared to be helping the stock market, as futures traded sharply higher Tuesday. Stocks also rallied Monday.

Markets also continued to absorb the unexpected decline of the U.S. Purchasing Managers’ Index data for the manufacturing sector, which measures factory activity.

That comes as the Federal Reserve maintains a hawkish tone about interest rates hikes, with speakers from the central bank emphasizing that lowering persistent inflation is a top priority for them.

Various Fed speakers are due to make remarks on Tuesday, which traders will pay close attention to in light of growing fears of a recession brought on by rate hikes being implemented too quickly.

Tuesday will also bring insights into the labor market as job openings data for August is released.  

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Government bond yields soar as markets weigh threat of a recession

Hoxton/Sam Edwards | Getty Images

Bond yields jumped this week after another major rate hike from the Federal Reserve, flashing a warning of market distress.

The policy-sensitive 2-year Treasury yield on Friday climbed to 4.266%, notching a 15-year high, and the benchmark 10-year Treasury hit 3.829%, the highest in 11 years.

Soaring yields come as the markets weigh the effects of the Fed’s policy decisions, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropping nearly 600 points into bear market territory, tumbling to a fresh low for 2022. 

The yield curve inversion, occurring when shorter-term government bonds have higher yields than long-term bonds, is one indicator of a possible future recession.  

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“Higher bond yields are bad news for the stock market and its investors,” said certified financial planner Paul Winter, owner of Five Seasons Financial Planning in Salt Lake City.

Higher bond yields create more competition for funds that may otherwise go into the stock market, Winter said, and with higher Treasury yields used in the calculation to assess stocks, analysts may reduce future expected cash flows.

What’s more, it may be less attractive for companies to issue bonds for stock buybacks, which is a way for profitable companies to return cash to shareholders, Winter said.

Fed hikes ‘somewhat’ contribute to higher bond yields

Market interest rates and bond prices typically move in opposite directions, which means higher rates cause bond values to fall. There’s also an inverse relationship between bond prices and yields, which rise as bond values drop.

Fed rate hikes have somewhat contributed to higher bond yields, Winter said, with the impact varying across the Treasury yield curve.

 “The farther you move out on the yield curve and the more you go down in credit quality, the less Fed rate hikes affect interest rates,” he said.

That’s a big reason for the inverted yield curve this year, with 2-year yields rising more dramatically than 10-year or 30-year yields, he said.  

Review stock and bond allocations

It’s a good time to revisit your portfolio’s diversification to see if changes are needed, such as realigning assets to match your risk tolerance, said Jon Ulin, a CFP and CEO of Ulin & Co. Wealth Management in Boca Raton, Florida.

On the bond side, advisors watch so-called duration, or measuring bonds’ sensitivity to interest rate changes. Expressed in years, duration factors in the coupon, time to maturity and yield paid through the term. 

Above all, investors must remain disciplined and patient, as always, but more specifically if they believe rates will continue to rise.

Paul Winter

owner of Five Seasons Financial Planning

While clients welcome higher bond yields, Ulin suggests keeping durations short and minimizing exposure to long-term bonds as rates climb.

“Duration risk may take a bite out of your savings over the next year regardless of the sector or credit quality,” he said.

Winter suggests tilting stock allocations toward “value and quality,” typically trading for less than the asset is worth, over growth stocks that may be expected to provide above-average returns. Often, value investors are seeking undervalued companies that are expected to appreciate over time. 

“Above all, investors must remain disciplined and patient, as always, but more specifically if they believe rates will continue to rise,” he added.

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10-year Treasury yield falls as markets digest Fed rate hike

The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury fell on Friday as markets adjusted to the Federal Reserve’s interest rate hike and attention turned toward flash PMI (Purchasing Managers’ Index) data for September that is due to be released later in the day.

The 10-year Treasury note last traded at 3.6946%, down 1 basis point as of 4:12 a.m. ET. It had hit an over 11-year high on Thursday, rising to above 3.71% after gaining almost 20 basis points.

The policy-sensitive 2-year Treasury continued to hover around 4.1% after having risen off the back of the Federal Reserve’s interest rate hike. On Thursday, it had soared as high as 4.163% — a level not seen since October 2007.

Yields and prices move in opposite directions. One basis point is equivalent to 0.01%.

September flash PMI data is set to be released on Friday, giving markets preliminary insight into the economic state of the manufacturing and services industries for the month. PMI data is used as a key indicator for inflation and recession concerns as it reflects whether industries are growing or shrinking, as well as supply and demand.

Analysts are expecting the services sector to inch higher after contracting sharply in August. Meanwhile, growth in the manufacturing industry is set to drop, after slowing down close to 2020 levels last month.

Markets are also digesting the Federal Reserve’s 75 basis point interest rate hike that was announced on Wednesday as the central bank tries to curb inflation. Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell is set to give a speech with further insights on Friday.

 

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The Fed is now expected to keep raising rates then hold them there, CNBC survey shows

US Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell gives a press briefing after the surprise announcement the FED will cut interest rates on March 3, 2020 in Washington, DC.

Eric Baradat | AFP | Getty Images

Wall Street finally looks to be embracing the idea that the Federal Reserve will hike rates into restrictive territory and stay at that high rate for a substantial period. That is, the Fed will hike and hold, not hike and cut as many in the markets had been forecasting.

The September CNBC Fed Survey shows the average respondent believes the Fed will hike 0.75 percentage point, or 75 basis points, at Wednesday’s meeting, bringing the federal funds rate to 3.1%. The central bank is forecast to keep hiking until the rate peaks in March 2023 at 4.26%.

The new peak rate forecast represents a nearly 40 basis-point increase from the July survey.

Fed funds expectations

CNBC

Respondents on average forecast the Fed will remain at that peak rate for nearly 11 months, reflecting a range of view of those who say the Fed will maintain its peak rate for as little as three months to those who say it will hold there for up to two years.

“The Fed has finally realized the seriousness of the inflation problem and has pivoted to messaging a positive real policy rate for an extended period of time,” John Ryding, chief economic advisor at Brean Capital, wrote in response to the survey.

Ryding sees a potential need for the Fed to hike as high as 5%, from the current range of 2.25%-2.5%.

At the same time, there is growing concern among the 35 respondents, including economists, fund managers and strategists, that the Fed will overdo its tightening and cause a recession.

“I’m fearing they are on the cusp of going overboard with the aggressiveness of their tightening, both in terms of the size of the hikes along with (quantitative tightening) and the speed at which they are doing so,” Peter Boockvar, chief investment officer of Bleakley Financial Group, wrote in response to the survey.

Boockvar had been among those who had urged the Fed to pivot and tighten policy very early on, a delay that many say has created the need for officials to move quickly now.

Respondents put the recession probability in the U.S. over the next 12 months at 52%, little changed from the July survey. That compares with a 72% probability for Europe.

In the U.S., 57% believe the Fed will tighten too much and cause a recession, while just 26% say it will tighten just enough and cause only a modest slowdown, a five-point drop from July.

Jim Paulsen, chief investment strategist at The Leuthold Group, is among the few optimists.

He says the Fed “has a real chance at a soft-landing” because the lagged effects of its tightening to date will reduce inflation. But that’s provided it doesn’t’ hike too far.

“All the Fed has to do to enjoy a soft landing is stand down after raising the funds rate to 3.25%, allow real GDP growth to remain positive, and take all the credit as inflation declines while real growth persists,” Paulsen wrote.

The bigger problem, however, is that most respondents do not see the Fed succeeding at hitting its 2% inflation target for several years.

Respondents forecast the consumer price index will end the year at a 6.8% year-over-year rate, down from the current level of 8.3%, and fall further to 3.6% in 2023.

Only in 2024 does a majority forecast the Fed will hit its target.

Elsewhere in the survey, more than 80% of respondents said they made no change to their inflation forecasts for this year or next as a result of the Inflation Reduction Act.

In the meantime, stocks look to be in a very difficult spot.

Respondents marked down their average 2022 outlook for the S&P 500 for the sixth straight survey. They now see the large-cap index ending the year at 3,953, or about 1.4% above Monday’s close. The index is expected forecast to rise to 4,310 by the end of 2023.

At the same time, most believe markets are more reasonably priced than they were during most of the pandemic.

About half say stock prices are too high relative to the outlook for earnings and the economy, and half say they are too low or just about right.

During the pandemic, at least 70% of respondents said stock prices were too high in nearly every survey.

The CNBC risk/reward ratio — which gauges the probability of a 10% upside minus downside correction in the next six months — is closer to the neutral zone at -5. It has been -9 to -14 for most of the past year.

The U.S. economy is seen running at stall speed this year and next with just 0.5% growth forecast in 2022 and little improvement expected for 2023 where the average GDP forecast is just 1.1%.

That means at least two years of below trend growth is now the most likely case.

Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics wrote: “There are many potential scenarios for the economic outlook, but under any scenario the economy will struggle over the next 12-18 months.”

The unemployment rate, now at 3.7, is seen rising to 4.4% next year. While still low by historical standards, it is rare for the unemployment rate to rise by 1 percentage point outside of a recession. Most economists said the U.S. is not in a recession now.

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BofA predicts breakout in mergers due to downcycle

Mergers in software may be about to break out.

Top investment banker Rick Sherlund of Bank of America sees a wave of struggling companies putting themselves up for sale at cheaper prices due to the economic downturn.

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“You do need to see greater capitulation,” the firm’s vice chair of technology investment banking told CNBC’s “Fast Money” on Thursday. “Companies will have their valuation expectations soften, and that will combine with more fully functional financial markets. I think it will accelerate the pace of M&A [mergers and acquisitions].”

His broad analysis comes on the heels of Adobe’s $20 billion dollar deal Thursday for design platform Figma. Adobe failed to generate excitement on Wall Street. Its shares plunged 17% due to questions about the price tag.

Sherlund, a former software analyst who hit No. 1 on Institutional Investor’s all-star analyst list 17 times in a row, worked at Goldman Sachs during the 2000 tech bubble. He believes the Street is now in the beginning stages of a difficult market cycle.

“You need to get through third quarter earnings reports to feel confident that maybe the bad news is largely out into the market because companies will be reporting lengthening of sales cycles,” he said. “We need to reset expectations for 2023.”

Read more about tech and crypto from CNBC Pro

Sherlund and his team are very active in the M&A market.

“You have private equity with a boatload of cash, and they need functioning debt markets for leverage to do deals,” Sherlund noted. “They’re very eager and actively looking at this sector … It suggests that [for] M&A, in absence of an IPO market, we’re just going to see a lot more consolidation coming in the sector.”

He notes the IPO has been hurt in connection with rising interest rate headwinds and inflation.

“[The IPO market] is not open. But when the window does open back up, you are going to see a lot of companies going public,” he added.

The long-term prospects for software are extremely attractive, according to Sherlund.

“You’ve got to be very bullish on the long-term fundamentals of the sector,” Sherlund said. “Every company is becoming a digital enterprise.”

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Fed’s Waller sees ‘significant’ rate hike this month, backs data-dependent approach

Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller on Friday echoed recent sentiments from his colleagues, saying he expects a big interest rate increase later this month.

He also said policymakers should stop trying to guess the future and instead stick to what the data is saying.

“Looking ahead to our next meeting, I support another significant increase in the policy rate,” Waller said in remarks prepared for a speech in Vienna. “But, looking further out, I can’t tell you about the appropriate path of policy. The peak range and how fast we will move there will depend on data we will receive about the economy.”

Those comments are similar to recent remarks from Fed Chair Jerome Powell, Vice Chair Lael Brainard and others, who said they are resolute in the effort to bring down inflation.

Markets strongly expect the central bank to take up its benchmark borrowing rate by 0.75 percent point, which would be the third consecutive move of that magnitude and the fastest pace of monetary tightening since the Fed began using the benchmark funds rate as its chief policy tool in the early 1990s.

While Waller did not commit to a particular increase, his comments had a mostly hawkish tone that indicated he would support the 0.75-point move, as opposed to a half-point increase.

“Based on all of the data that we have received since the FOMC’s last meeting, I believe the policy decision at our next meeting will be straightforward,” he said. “Because of the strong labor market, right now there is no tradeoff between the Fed’s employment and inflation objectives, so we will continue to aggressively fight inflation.

If the Fed does implement the three-quarter point hike, it would take benchmark rates up to a range of 3%-3.25%. Waller said that if inflation does not abate through the rest of the year, the Fed may have to take the rate “well above 4%.”

He further suggested the Fed get away from its practice of providing “forward guidance” on what its future path would be and the factors that would come into play to dictate those moves.

“I believe forward guidance is becoming less useful at this stage of the tightening cycle,” he said. “Future decisions on the size of additional rate increases and the destination for the policy rate in this cycle should be solely determined by the incoming data and their implications for economic activity, employment, and inflation.”

Waller pointed out welcome signs that inflation is moderating from its highest peak in more than 40 years.

The personal consumption expenditures price index, which is the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, rose 6.3% from a year ago in July — 4.6% excluding food and energy. That’s still well above the central bank’s 2% long-run goal, and Waller said inflation remains “widespread” even with the recent softening.

He also noted that inflation looked to be softening at one point last year, then turned sharply higher to where the consumer price index rose 9% on a year-over-year basis at one point.

“The consequences of being fooled by a temporary softening in inflation could be even greater now if another misjudgment damages the Fed’s credibility. So, until I see a meaningful and persistent moderation of the rise in core prices, I will support taking significant further steps to tighten monetary policy,” he said.

Kansas City Fed President Esther George also spoke Friday, echoing concerns over inflation but also advocating a more deliberate approach to policy tightening.

“As unsatisfying as it might be, weighing in on the peak policy rate is likely just speculation at this point,” she said.

“We will have to determine the course of our policy through observation rather than reference to theoretical models or pre-pandemic trends,” George added. “Given the likely lags in the passthrough of tighter monetary policy to real economic conditions, this argues for steadiness and purposefulness over speed.”

George was the only Federal Open Market Committee member to vote against June’s three-quarter point rate increase, advocating instead for a half-point move, though she did vote for the July hike.

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Fed Vice Chair Brainard vows ‘we are in this for as long as it takes’ to stop inflation

Federal Reserve Vice Chair Lael Brainard vowed Wednesday to press the fight against inflation that she said is hurting lower-income Americans the most.

That will mean more interest rate increases and keeping rates higher for longer, she said in remarks prepared for a speech in New York. Brainard cushioned the remarks with an acknowledgement that policymakers will be data dependent and conscious of overdoing tightening.

“We are in this for as long as it takes to get inflation down,” the central bank official said, just two weeks before the Fed’s next policy meeting. “So far, we have expeditiously raised the policy rate to the peak of the previous cycle, and the policy rate will need to rise further.”

Stocks rallied further after the remarks as investors look for signs that the Fed is committing to bringing down inflation without going too far.

“At some point in the tightening cycle, the risks will become more two-sided,” Brainard added. “The rapidity of the tightening cycle and its global nature, as well as the uncertainty around the pace at which the effects of tighter financial conditions are working their way through aggregate demand, create risks associated with overtightening.”

Markets are betting that the rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee enacts its third consecutive 0.75 percentage point increase in benchmark rates when it meets again Sept. 20-21.

Lael Brainard, vice chair of the US Federal Reserve, speaks during an Urban Institute panel discussion in Washington, D.C., US, on Friday, June 3, 2022.

Ting Shen | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Brainard’s remarks reflect recent comments from multiple official who have said rates likely will remain elevated “for some time” even after the Fed stops hiking. The commitment has come from the highest levels of central bank policymakers, including Chairman Jerome Powell and New York Fed President John Williams.

The federal funds rate current is targeted in a range between 2.25%-2.5% following four consecutive FOMC increases this year.

Though inflation has shown signs lately of plateauing, year-over-year increases are near the highest levels in more than 40 years. Supply shocks, record-setting fiscal and monetary stimulus, and the war in Ukraine have contributed to the surge.

Without committing to a specific course of action, Brainard said the Fed needs to remain vigilant.

“With a series of inflationary supply shocks, it is especially important to guard against the risk that households and businesses could start to expect inflation to remain above 2 percent in the longer run, which would make it much more challenging to bring inflation back down to our target,” she said.

Those inflationary pressures are “especially hard on low-income families” who spend most of their household budgets on food, energy and shelter costs, Brainard added.

She noted that there is some anecdotal evidence of prices coming down in the retail sectors, as store owners address a pullback in spending due to inflation.

In addition, she said there “also could be scope for reduction” in profit margins for the auto industry, which she said are “unusually large” as gauged by the gap between wholesale and retail prices.

Conversely, she said the labor market remains unusually strong, with rising labor force participation in August a positive sign.

Brainard said policymakers will be watching the data closely as the economy slows, hopefully tempering inflation along the way.

“Monetary policy will need to be restrictive for some time to provide confidence that inflation is moving down to target. The economic environment is highly uncertain, and the path of policy will be data dependent,” she said.

Fed Chairman Jerome Powell speaks Thursday as the central bank approaches its quiet period before the September meeting.

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U.S. needs miracle to avoid recession, economist Stephen Roach warns

Negative economic growth in the year’s first half may be a foreshock to a much deeper downturn that could last into 2024.

Stephen Roach, who served as chair of Morgan Stanley Asia, warns the U.S. needs a “miracle” to avoid a recession.

“We’ll definitely have a recession as the lagged impacts of this major monetary tightening start to kick in,” Roach told CNBC’s “Fast Money” on Monday. “They haven’t kicked in at all right now.”

Roach, a Yale University senior fellow and former Federal Reserve economist, suggests Fed Chair Jerome Powell has no choice but to take a Paul Volcker approach to tightening. In the early 1980’s, Volcker aggressively hiked interest rates to tame runaway inflation.

“Go back to the type of pain Paul Volcker had to impose on the U.S. economy to ring out inflation. He had to take the unemployment rate above 10%,” said Roach. “The only way we’re not going to get there is if the Fed under Jerome Powell sticks to his word, stays focused on discipline, and gets that real Federal funds rate into the restrictive zone. And, the restrictive zone is a long ways away from where we are right now.”

Despite the Fed’s sharp interest rate hike trajectory, the unemployment rate is at 3.5%. It matches the lowest level since 1969. That could change on Friday when the Bureau of Labor Statistics releases its August report. Roach predicts the rate is bound to start climbing.

“The fact that it hasn’t happened and the Fed has done a significant monetary tightening to date shows you how much work they have to do,” he noted. “The unemployment rate has got to go probably above 5%, hopefully not a whole lot higher than that. But it could go to 6%.”

The ultimate tipping point may be consumers. Roach speculates they will soon capitulate due to persistent inflation. Once they do, he predicts the pullback in spending will reverberate through the broader economy and create pain in the labor market.

“We’re going to have to have a cumulative drop in the economy [GDP] somewhere of around 1.5% to 2%. And, the unemployment rate is going to have to go up by 1 to 2 percentage points in a minimum,” said Roach. “That would be a garden variety recession.”

‘Cold war’ with China

The prognosis abroad isn’t much better.

He expects the global economy will also sink into a recession. He doubts China’s economic activity will cushion the impact, citing the country’s zero-Covid policy, serious supply chain backlogs and tensions with the West.

Roach is particularly worried about the U.S. and China relationship, which he writes about in his new book “Accidental Conflict: America, China and the Clash of False Narratives” due out in November.

“In the last five years, we’ve gone from a trade war to a tech war to now a cold war,” Roach said. “When you’re in this trajectory of esclating conflict as we have been, it doesn’t take much of spark to turn it into something far more severe.”

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