- Fixed Income Portfolio Manager
- Insights
- Capabilities
- Funds
- Sustainability
- About Us
- My Account
The views expressed are those of the author at the time of writing. Other teams may hold different views and make different investment decisions. The value of your investment may become worth more or less than at the time of original investment. While any third-party data used is considered reliable, its accuracy is not guaranteed. For professional, institutional, or accredited investors only.
Following four consecutive 75 basis-points (bps) increases to its policy rate, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) finally slowed the pace of its rate-raising campaign, with a 50 bps hike at its December meeting — a move that had been widely anticipated by most observers.
Despite the smaller rate increase, the FOMC signaled that monetary policy might need to be even more restrictive in 2023 than it had projected this past September, with its policy rate likely going higher than what’s recently been reflected in market prices. Although the November inflation print showed further deceleration, US Federal Reserve (Fed) Chair Jerome Powell suggested that the FOMC will need to see “substantially” more evidence that inflation is continuing to drift lower — which could take several months or more of encouraging data — before the Fed would be willing to pause its rate-hiking cycle.
The annual US headline inflation rate, as measured by the Consumer Price Index (CPI), moderated to 7.1% year over year in November 2022 — its lowest level of the year — helped by a sharp decline in the energy components of the index. Core inflation also fell more than expected, to 6.0% year over year.
A significant drop in core goods prices accounted for the bulk of the easing inflation, while core services prices have proven “stickier” due to the shelter component remaining quite elevated relative to history. However, most of the leading indicators I track suggest that house prices will come down over the next six to 12 months. Even so, my base case right now is for US inflation to end 2023 above the Fed’s target, which would make it exceedingly difficult for the Fed to justify the interest-rate cuts the market has been pricing in.
I suspect the Fed will lift its policy rate to a terminal level of around 5% by the first quarter of 2023 and then go “on hold” to ensure that monetary policy remains restrictive enough to keep pushing inflation lower.
Thus far, the labor market has been quite resilient in the face of Fed policy tightening, but that will need to change before the Fed can even consider cutting rates. Unfortunately, that probably means the US unemployment rate will need to rise by more than the Fed is currently forecasting in order to achieve enough demand destruction to bring inflation down sufficiently.
As of this writing, I maintain a bias for the US Treasury yield curve to continue to flatten from here. Most fixed income investors are well aware of the heightened risk of an economic recession next year, with many proclaiming it would be the most well-telegraphed US recession of all time. If the Fed prematurely waves the “all-clear” flag and begins to cut rates with inflation still perched above its target, inflation could quickly reaccelerate, damaging the Fed’s inflation-fighting credibility in the process.
Bottom line: I’d say the Fed has a tough and unenviable task ahead of it.
Expert
URL References
Related Insights
Stay up to date with the latest market insights and our point of view.
Have you looked at Brazilian equities lately?
Equity Research Analyst David Reid believes now is an opportune time for EM equity investors to consider implementing or augmenting portfolio allocations to Brazilian stocks.
4 reasons why European investors may benefit from going global
Bonds are looking increasingly attractive, but a new, more volatile, normal means investors with a home bias may wish to revisit portfolios. An inconsistent policy landscape and lower hedging costs are just some of the reasons why European investors in particular may benefit from going global.
Did the Fed just make a policy error?
Did the Fed just make a policy error? All things considered, Fixed Income Portfolio Manager Jeremy Forster thinks the answer is yes. Learn why and what the implications could be.
Is the long-awaited change in Japan’s fortunes finally materialising?
Portfolio Manager Dan Maguire explores why Japan may finally be exiting deflation and assesses the opportunities this structural change could create for small- and mid-cap equities.
Three macro assumptions that could be just plain wrong
Fixed Income Portfolio Manager Brij Khurana offers his non-consensus take on three entrenched, but potentially flawed, beliefs in today's market environment.
Putting the global economy to the test
With economic and market fault lines emerging as a result of higher interest rates, members of our Investment Strategy team reassess the investment landscape and offer their views on equities, fixed income, and commodities.
High-yield bonds: Too early to get aggressive?
Our high-yield team suggests a somewhat defensive risk posture for now but expects opportunities to take on greater risk to arise later this year.
Macro risks to watch in this rapidly oscillating global cycle
Macro Strategist John Butler explores the two key questions he believes macro investors should focus on in the current volatile environment.
Financial stability versus inflation: The Fed’s balancing act has gotten much trickier
The Fed’s policy calculus has clearly changed somewhat over the past few weeks but the central bank may not be done hiking rates just yet, says Fixed Income Portfolio Manager Jeremy Forster.
Securitized assets: Caught in the storm but with scattered bright spots
Securitized assets have been on the front lines of the ongoing turmoil in the banking sector, but not all securitized subsectors appear equally vulnerable.
SVB collapse: What are the implications?
Multi-Asset Strategist Supriya Menon shares her latest perspectives on the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank Financial Group (SVB) and the unfolding implications for investors. (Published 14 March 2023)
URL References
Related Insights