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Protectionism seen as a vote winner by both parties After Fed Chair Jerome Powell acknowledged this week that there has been a “lack of further progress” on lowering inflation this year, markets dialled back rate cut expectations, with the first 25bp …
19th April 2024
Fed on hold until later this year The third consecutive 0.4% m/m increase in core CPI in March, coming on the heels of the 303,000 surge in non-farm payrolls, fuelled fears that a pick-up in the real economy is now translating into a resurgence in …
12th April 2024
Supercore inflation fundamentals still improving Inflation fundamentals improving This week brought more good news on the outlook for so-called supercore inflation. Core services (ex-housing) prices, aka supercore, are the most labour-sensitive component …
5th April 2024
Port closure to have no significant effects on economy Streets of Baltimore The collapse of the Francis Scott Key bridge, which was hit by an out-of-control container ship this week, could result in a lengthy disruption to the Baltimore port. …
28th March 2024
The Fed wasn’t as hawkish as we had expected this week and, assuming the recent upturn in core inflation proves temporary, there is still a good chance that interest rate cuts will begin in June. Fed content with more gradual inflation fall Despite recent …
22nd March 2024
Fed to stress caution amid inflation uncertainty We still expect the Fed to cut interest rates in June, although we don’t expect officials to provide a strong steer either for or against at next week’s FOMC meeting. The updated Summary of Economic …
15th March 2024
Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s congressional testimony struck a notably less hawkish tone than we have heard recently from some of his colleagues. And with the economic data this week providing little support for the idea of a renewed upturn in inflation, we …
8th March 2024
Following the more hawkish speeches from Fed Vice Chair Philip Jefferson and Governor Christopher Waller last week, that tone continued this week – with regional Fed Presidents including New York’s John Williams repeating the suggestion that interest rate …
1st March 2024
Fed to delay first rate cut until June Fed to wait until June Based on comments from Fed officials this week, we now expect the Fed to wait until June to begin cutting interest rates. Moreover, when it does begin to loosen policy, we suspect that the Fed …
23rd February 2024
PPI a kick in the teeth for inflation doves Mea Culpa The much stronger-than-expected 0.5% m/m increase in core PPI in January came as a hammer blow for PCE estimates, since the overshoot was mostly in the portfolio management and health care-related …
16th February 2024
Bond vigilante fiddle, as budget burns Budget on an unsustainable path The CBO released new budget projections this week showing the Federal deficit falling only slightly from 6.2% of GDP in fiscal year 2023, to 5.3% in 2024. The deficit is then expected …
9th February 2024
First rate cut delayed until May Based on the steer provided by Fed Chair Jerome Powell halfway through this week’s press conference, we now expect the first Fed rate cut to come at the early-May FOMC meeting rather than in mid-March, with the Fed cutting …
2nd February 2024
It is hard to say which is more remarkable: that GDP growth accelerated last year following the Fed’s most aggressive tightening campaign in decades, or that core inflation nevertheless fell back to the 2% target in annualised terms over the second half …
26th January 2024
We argued last week that there was little to support the idea that the “last mile” of getting inflation back to 2% will somehow be the hardest. But new data on rent inflation released this week raise the possibility that the disinflationary process won’t …
19th January 2024
Trump faces first test in Iowa Iowa marks the start of the primary race Donald Trump is still the prohibitive favourite to win the Republican presidential nomination. But the Iowa caucuses, which kick off the primary season this coming Monday, should …
12th January 2024
Fed still coy about QT end-game FOMC minutes put focus on inflation data The minutes of the mid-December FOMC meeting did not dissuade us that the Fed will start to cut interest rates from this March onwards. Admittedly, officials warned that “they would …
5th January 2024
This week saw a renewed attempt from some Fed officials to push back against market expectations for interest rate cuts but, with core PCE inflation running at an annualised pace of below 2% over the past six months, this final flurry of hawkishness isn’t …
22nd December 2023
Fed & markets catching up with inflation reality The Fed’s embrace of interest rate cuts next year is understandable when the latest data suggest that core PCE inflation is rapidly closing in on the 2% target. The plunge in expectations in the aftermath …
15th December 2023
Markets call the Fed’s bluff on higher for longer Markets abandon higher for longer The Fed may not be quite ready to abandon its tightening bias at this week’s FOMC meeting, but the markets are no longer buying its “higher for longer” mantra. Markets …
8th December 2023
Despite strong growth, core inflation normalising Q3 growth up, Q4 down This week’s modest upward revision to third-quarter GDP growth, which is now estimated to have been as strong as 5.2% annualised, rather than 4.9%, was certainly eye-catching. It …
1st December 2023
Post-SVB bank lending holding up well Credit where credit is due The SVB crisis back in mid-March sparked fears of a credit crunch, particularly among regional banks who are the principal source of funding for commercial real estate. Post-SVB, while the …
22nd November 2023
Falling inflation prompts rate cut speculation Better inflation news prompts big market moves The release of the slightly-better-than-expected October CPI data earlier this week triggered a massive reaction in markets, with the two-year Treasury yield …
17th November 2023
Energy disinflation; credit conditions still tight Crude oil price slump to bolster disinflation Despite the ongoing war in the Middle East, crude oil prices have slumped – with the WTI benchmark down from a peak of more than $90 per barrel in late …
10th November 2023
There is now mounting evidence that the economy is set for a renewed slowdown in the fourth quarter and that inflationary pressures from the labour market continue to ease. Although markets have already moved to price out any real chance of further rate …
3rd November 2023
Has the AI productivity boom already begun? New Speaker, old problems The House Republicans finally managed to elect a new Speaker this week, with the caucus eventually rallying around Mike Johnson, who up until this week could hardly have been described …
27th October 2023
The apparent strength of third-quarter GDP growth won’t convince the Fed to resume hiking its policy rate, particularly with the ongoing surge in long-term bond yields presenting a growing threat to the economy. Q3 GDP growth strong Despite the recent hit …
20th October 2023
There appears to be growing support at the Fed for the idea that the recent sell-off in long-term Treasuries reduces the need for further policy rate hikes, but the more persuasive reason for the Fed to pause is that inflation is continuing to ease …
13th October 2023
Rising long rates a fiscal rather than monetary problem Surge in long yields not all due to higher for longer The conventional wisdom is that the recent surge in Treasury yields is a reaction to the Fed’s “higher for longer” message. But that surge has …
6th October 2023
GDP-GDI gap left largely unexplained In the end, the comprehensive revisions to the GDP data changed almost nothing of substance – the real economy was still 6.1% bigger in the second quarter of this year than it was pre-pandemic in the fourth quarter of …
29th September 2023
The new projections published by the Fed this week signalled that officials are fully onboard with the idea of interest rates staying ‘higher for longer’, but that is based on forecasts for real economic growth and inflation which we believe are …
22nd September 2023
Core inflation still on firm downward trend Although core CPI increased by 0.3% m/m in August (or 0.28% to be precise), up slightly on the 0.2% m/m gains (both 0.16%) in the preceding two months, the rise last month was still smaller than the average gain …
15th September 2023
Higher energy prices not a game changer for the Fed Crude oil prices up, wholesale gasoline down? The further rise this week in the WTI crude oil price to a 10-month high of $87 a barrel, from a recent low of less than $70 in late June, has raised …
8th September 2023
This week brought more data showing that real economic activity is holding up surprisingly well given surging interest rates but, in part due to the easing in labour market conditions, price pressures are nevertheless fading. US consumer remains the …
1st September 2023
After a relatively cautious speech at Jackson Hole from Fed Chair Jerome Powell and data this week which cast doubt on the idea of an economic resurgence, we still aren’t convinced that the rise in market interest rate expectations for the next few years …
25th August 2023
The continued surge in long-term Treasury yields to their highest level since before the financial crisis, as expectations of an economic re-acceleration have mounted, sets a fraught backdrop ahead of Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s speech at Jackson Hole next …
18th August 2023
Inflation and activity data at odds Core price pressures collapsing It might seem a little premature to be celebrating when annual core CPI inflation was still as high as 4.7% in July, down only trivially from 4.8%, but don’t be fooled by the strong …
11th August 2023
Inflationary pressure dissipating ULC growth slowdown adds to disinflation pressure The news that average hourly earnings growth increased by 0.4% m/m in July, and 4.4% over the past 12 months, might seem like a problem for the Fed. With productivity …
4th August 2023
This week’s FOMC meeting brought hints that Fed officials are no longer wedded to previous plans for further policy tightening. Even if activity growth continues to hold up a bit better than expected, we think a run of weaker inflation readings will …
28th July 2023
The Fed is almost certain to hike its policy rate by 25bp to between 5.25% and 5.50% at next week’s FOMC meeting, but we increasingly believe that will prove to be the peak. Despite the ‘higher for longer’ rhetoric from officials, a more marked decline …
21st July 2023
The news that core CPI increased by a muted 0.16% m/m in June, which is less than 2% in annualised terms, has raised hopes that the Fed’s planned rate hike this month will be the last in this cycle, with the policy rate peaking at 5.25% to 5.50%. …
14th July 2023
The 10-year Treasury yield climbed back above 4% this week, as markets interpreted the minutes of the mid-June FOMC meeting as hawkish and reacted to signs that, although labour market conditions may be easing, wage growth remains too high. Most …
7th July 2023
The apparent weakness of consumption growth and slowdown in core inflation in the second quarter leave us a bit more confident in our view that the Fed’s next rate hike will prove to be the last. We learned this week that GDP growth is now estimated to …
30th June 2023
In a quiet week for economic data, the biggest news was further evidence of a turnaround in housing activity, with housing starts jumping by 22% m/m in May to their highest level in a year. The sheer scale of that move did look a little suspicious and …
23rd June 2023
The Fed put its rate hiking cycle on pause this week but, in a hawkish shift, its new projections showed the median fed funds rate rising to 5.6% by year-end, which is consistent with 50bp of additional tightening. We agree that the Fed will push ahead …
16th June 2023
We expect the Fed to leave interest rates unchanged at next week’s FOMC meeting but, in what could be characterised as a “hawkish skip”, to signal via forward guidance (updated SEP forecasts and language in the statement) that officials are minded to hike …
9th June 2023
Debt ceiling ends not with a bang but a whimper The debt ceiling standoff ended not with a bang but a whimper – as the bill easily passed the House and Senate with comfortable majorities. In the end, the debt ceiling negotiations played out largely as …
2nd June 2023
GDI suggests economy already in recession This week’s upward revision to first-quarter GDP growth, to 1.3% annualised from 1.1%, suggests the economy had marginally more momentum than previously thought. But, in stark contrast, the first release of real …
26th May 2023
Recent solid activity data and the apparent progress on debt ceiling negotiations appear to have convinced some Fed officials that it is still too early to pause interest rate hikes. We still aren’t convinced the Fed will hike again in June, but there is …
19th May 2023
Core CPI inflation remains elevated The April CPI release was greeted enthusiastically by markets this week, with bond yields falling and equities rallying, even though the 0.4% m/m increase in core CPI was in line with consensus expectations. The annual …
12th May 2023
The April employment report showed that while jobs growth remains solid enough, it is still trending lower and the surveys suggest activity growth is slowing too. With ongoing concerns over regional banks looking more likely to result in a further …
5th May 2023