by Liz Ann Sonders, Chief Investment Strategist, Charles Schwab & Company Ltd.
Per the accompanying statement, the "committee anticipates that ongoing increases in the target range will be appropriate in order to attain a stance of monetary policy that is sufficiently restrictive to return inflation to 2% over time." That was essentially a repeat of language it has used in previous statements and via other communication channels. There had been some chatter (not including ours) about the Federal Reserve possibly telegraphing that they "were done" at this month's meeting, but the "ongoing increases" comment puts that notion, at least for now, to bed. That helps to explain the initial negative reaction by stocks.
The end is near
Perhaps as a hopeful sign of the pandemic receding as a major influence, this month's statement eliminated the prior reference to "public health" on its list of what the FOMC is assessing to gauge the "appropriate stance of monetary policy." The other information the Fed is watching continued to be listed, including "labor market conditions, inflation pressures and inflation expectations, and financial and international developments."
On to the presser, and key highlights
- As usual, there was an acknowledgement of the pain and hardship wrought on the public from high inflation.
- The U.S. economy "slowed significantly" in 2022, but indicators suggest "modest" growth in this year's first quarter.
- Repeated again was that "ongoing increases" will be appropriate and that there are "no grounds for complacency" due to the risk of high inflation becoming "entrenched" in expectations.
- Shifting to a slower pace of rate hikes allows the FOMC to better gauge how the economy is responding and that future decisions will be made "meeting-by-meeting."
- The Fed has been "taking forceful steps," but reducing inflation further will involve "below-trend growth and a softer labor market."
- "History argues against relaxing policy prematurely."
- Financial conditions have "tightened very significantly" over the past year, but the Fed is "not yet" at a sufficiently restrictive policy stance, and that "many things affect financial conditions, not just Fed policy."
- The Fed's "focus is not on short-term moves [in financial conditions], but on sustained changes." (The lack of a substantial push-back on the recent loosening of financial conditions probably contributed to the market's turn higher.)
- It is "gratifying to see the disinflationary process now getting under way and we continue to get strong labor market data;" and that so far, they "see progress without any weakening in labor market conditions."
- The average hourly earnings measure of wages and the employment cost index (ECI) have abated but remain at "elevated levels," with volatile but still-high jobs openings cited as an "important indicator."
- Reiteration of the "risk of doing too little" is greater than doing too much.
- It's important to focus on inflation in "core services excluding housing" which needs to show disinflation before the Fed can say its job is complete.
- Goods inflation is coming down "pretty fast" now.
- "Ongoing increases" in rates likely means "a couple more hikes" before the terminal rate is reached. (That would bring the rate to a 5% to 5.25% range.)
- Regarding the debt ceiling, "nobody should assume the Fed can save the economy if there's a default" and that the "only way forward" is for Congress to raise it.
- Noted was that "state and local governments are flush" with cash, which should help "support growth this year."
- The Fed is not exploring the option of taking some "gaps" between FOMC meetings, but that "a lot of options are available" in terms of future moves in policy.
- Powell continues "to think that there's a path to getting inflation back down to 2%" without a significant economic and/or employment decline.
- The "base case" for 2023 is for "continued, but subdued growth" (as was the case in 2022).
In sum
The markets' moves were extreme. Stocks initially sold off sharply, before staging an impressive rebound during the press conference. Bonds were volatile, too, with the two-year Treasury yield popping higher initially to nearly 4.25% before sinking during the presser to as low as 4.1%.
For now, we believe the U.S. economy remains in the midst of a "rolling recession," with consumer goods and housing/housing segments related in recession, but stronger services spending serving as a positive offset for now. An "official" recession (declared, ultimately, by the National Bureau of Economic Research) remains a risk given the messages emanating from the deeply inverted yield curve and the 10-month plunge in leading economic indicators. Key to remember though is that the stock market is one of those leading indicators and like is typically the case, should lead the economy as it eventually stabilizes. That's not to say the bear market is over, but that a lot of the economic pain and inflation already experienced has been reflected in the bear market that's been underway for more than a year.