The Federal Reserve delivered the widely expected hike yesterday.
A year ago it suggested four hikes in 2016 were likely appropriate. The
market never accepted that, and as the year progressed many derided it.
Yesterday the Federal Reserve's projections anticipated three hikes next year
instead of the two anticipated in September.
The distribution of the forecasts illustrates
what happened. In September, seven
of the 17 members expected Fed funds would finish 2017 in the 1.25%-1.50% or
higher. Yesterday 11did. In
September, 10 expected that Fed funds
would finish 2017 1.0%-1.25% of lower. Now six do.
Yellen made two important points that ought not to be lost.
First, she noted that the change in the median forecast was small and was the
result of a few members changing their forecasts. Second, and arguably
more important, some but not all the participants
incorporated changes in fiscal policy. This
gives meaning to the old saw about a camel being a horse made in
committee. We did not anticipate a change in forecasts based on fiscal
policy that is impossible to make any judgments.
It is not just about size, but they simply contribute the disparity of income
and wealth or do they lift the growth potential.
What changed in the market's reaction function is that the rise in US
rates was an adjustment in the real rate. That is to say that it
appears that inflation expectations did not change. Here we measure
inflation expectations by the 10-year breakeven rate (inflation-linked bond
yield and the conventional bond yield). For example, the 10-year US yield
is up 14 bp on the week. The 10-year break-even is down three basis
points this week.
There are several other developments today, though the dollar's rally and
bond sell-off appear driven by the Fed.
Equity markets are more mixed, with Asia following the US lower, and Europe is mostly moving higher.
First are the central banks. The Swiss National Bank kept
policy steady and repeated its usual threat to intervene. It appears that
it will accept some modest franc appreciation. Norway's Norges Bank
surprised many by leaving its rate path unchanged. Many had expected that
although there would be no change in
policy, the central bank would lower the rate path due to the krone's
strength. However, officials seemed more concerned about financial
excesses and real estate prices. The knone
is the only major currency not to have fallen against the dollar today.
The Bank of England is ahead. No change is expected in the neutral bias. Of note
sterling and interest rates are higher than when the MPC last met.
Second are the economic reports. There are three to note.
Australian reported stronger than expected labor data, even though the
unemployment rate rose to 5.75 from 5.6%. The participation rate rose
more (64.6% from 64.4%(. The 39.1k net new jobs created were all full-time
positions, and the October series was revised higher. The
Australian dollar is faring second best among the majors today, off 0.2% as it
dips below $0.7400. Initial support is pegged
near $0.7370.
The flash eurozone PMI composite
was, as expected, unchanged at 53.9. The three-month average is 53.7,
which is the highest since Q4 15. It suggests Q4 growth is firm around
0.4%. The details are interesting. Manufacturing jumped to
54.9 from 53.7, but services unexpectedly fell to 53.1 from 53.8. This is
clearly a function of something in Germany. France's manufacturing and
service reading were both above expectations, finishing a difficult year on a firm note.
Elsewhere, we note that the details of the TLTRO will be released.
The average take-down of the first two was about 32.5 bln euros.
The amount is seen as generally
disappointing. The Greek government claim to use its overshoot on the
primary budget surplus target to make an extra pension payment and ease the
sales tax in the islands hit by the refugee crisis brought a strong rebuke from
the ESM. This pressured Greek
assets. Today's reports suggested that France was breaking from the ESM to side with Greece.
The euro has fallen two cents from yesterday's high. Last
year's low was set in late-March just
below $1.0460, the lowest since 2003. There is little on the charts until
closer to $1.0075 and then the psychologically important $1.00. A move
now back above $1.0550 would likely signal a consolidative phase. The US
two-year premium over German has jumped to 2.05%. Many will only see the
Fed's hand in this, but look closer, and
you'll see that the German two-year yield fell to new record lows near minus
80 bp. The adjustments to the securities lending program by the ECB and
Bundesbank have not been sufficient to ease the pressure in the repo
market. Year-end considerations exacerbate this pressure.
Rising US yields are lifting the
greenback against the yen. It has approached JPY118.50, the highest
since last February. It dipped briefly
below JPY114.80 yesterday. There is little chart resistance until the JPY120
area. Europe has extended Asia's advance. In the two weeks through
last Friday, foreign investors bought
about JPY680 bln of Japanese equities and JPY1.39 trillion of Japanese
bonds. Much of the equities are likely on a currency-hedged basis.
The bonds may be financed in the cross-currency
swap market rather than in the spot market.
Disclaimer
Greenback Extends Gains on Back of Fed
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
December 15, 2016
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