The Federal Reserve kept rates steady on Wednesday as the central bank
continued its cautious monetary policy approach, though stopped short of
ruling out further rate hikes. The decision came amid a backdrop of a
growing economy, strong labour market, and inflation that is still well
above the central bank’s target.
As widely expected, the Fed’s rate-setting committee unanimously agreed to
hold the key federal funds rate in a target range between 5.25%-5.5%. This
was the second consecutive meeting that the Federal Open Market Committee
chose to hold, following a string of 11 interest rate hikes since March
2023.
Source: Federal Reserve Bank of New York
While Fed Chair Jerome Powell left the door open for another rate hike, he
used a less hawkish tone than markets were anticipating, acknowledging that
monetary conditions had tightened substantially in recent months, which
raised hopes that the Fed isn’t likely to resume rate hikes.
Yet, the pick-up in economic activity remains a worry for the Fed as it
threatens to boost inflation, clouding the Fed’s progress toward bringing
down inflation. The U.S. economy accelerated to 4.9% in Q3, according to
data released last week, marking the biggest rise in growth in nearly two
years. The solid growth was underpinned by a still-strong labour market
which has been supporting consumer spending. However, such a solid growth
rate might not be sustainable moving forward.
The major question facing Fed officials is whether they will need to make
one final rate increase in December, a possibility they left open on
Wednesday. However, traders have taken Jerome Powell comments as a sign
that the Fed is likely done with its rate hikes and now expect rate cuts by
mid-2024.
Treasury yields retreated, after having previously climbed to levels last
seen in 2007, while equity markets rebounded strongly. Although yields
declined from their recent highs it is unlikely that they will return to
pre-pandemic lows any time soon. For consumers, elevated yields mean
financial pain, because itserves as a benchmark rate for a
variety of consumer borrowings.
Over the past few months, inflation has been stabilizing, with annual
consumer price growth falling to 3.7% from the 9.1% high reached last year,
but the labour market has remained stubbornly resilient. The October ADP
private sector payrolls came in at a lower than the expected 113,000 but is
still stronger than the September reading.
The ADP data came ahead of Friday’s nonfarm payroll report, which will give
the Fed a new detailed reading on the state of the still-tight labour
market. Until the labour market has cooled substantially and inflation
rates drop back to the Fed’s 2% target, the option of future rate hikes
remains on the table.
Source: TradingView
Continuing war between Russia and Ukraine, growing tensions in the Middle
East, as well as souring U.S. and China relations are spurring fear among
investors. Although immediate worries from the Middle East conflict appear
to have subsided, investors remain on edge. Prolonged war could drive oil
prices and inflation higher, which in turn would hurt economic growth.
While the strongly oversold U.S. equity index has rallied over the past
four days, upside from here is likely to be limited and new fresh highs are
unlikely. The economic impact from the Fed tightening is yet to materialise
and, in our view, high borrowing costs could take down consumer spending or
the job market soon. Therefore, while November and December could be
favourable for the stock market, the current strength is unlikely to extend
into next year.