The Federal Reserve reveals post-election easing


A look at the coming day in US and global markets by Mike Dolan

With another monthly round of persistent inflation and uncertainty over fiscal, tariff and immigration policy looming, the Federal Reserve is becoming more cautious about the scope for further policy easing.

Fed chief Jerome Powell didn’t reveal much in a closely watched speech Thursday, but he made clear that the central bank still sees a robust economy and has plenty of new information to take into account in deciding how much further it should lower rates. interest rates.

“The economy is not sending any signal that we should be in a hurry to lower rates,” Powell said at a Dallas Federal Reserve event.

With just 18 months to go until the end of his last term as head of the Federal Reserve, Powell seemed willing to dodge questions about the policy decisions of Donald Trump’s incoming administration, reinforced as he was on Thursday by the confirmation of a Republican victory in the Congress.

“We can do the arithmetic,” Powell said when asked about possible increases in import tariffs and immigration restrictions, adding that “this is getting me into political issues that I really want to stay as far away from as possible.”

But in addition to a more positive-than-expected producer price report for October and another drop in weekly jobless claims, interest rate markets continued to reduce expectations that the Federal Reserve will ease its policies in the future. October retail and industrial numbers top Friday’s agenda.

Futures now see only a 60% chance that the Federal Reserve will cut rates again next month, and less than three quarter-point cuts are already fully priced in over the next year. Some economists now think Fed rates may not drop below 4% again this cycle.

Both the 12-month Treasury bill rate and the two-year note yield are now hovering just under 4.4%, with the 10-year benchmark just off five-month highs of around 4.45%.

And two-year market inflation expectations are stabilizing at around 2.5%, well above the Federal Reserve’s 2% target. And as cash rates remain elevated, money market fund assets continue to rise: Assets under management rose more than $100 billion over the past week to another record high of $6.67 trillion.

Wall Street stocks halted their immediate post-election rally this week and the dollar also saw its first daily decline on Friday since the results were revealed more than a week ago.

Attention focused on the state of other major economies, with nerves frayed by the threat of a global trade war.

The latest check on China’s economic health showed a mix of weak industrial readings and upbeat retail growth over the past month. But widespread pessimism about potential U.S. tariff increases, disappointment over recent stimulus details and continued real estate concerns sent Chinese stocks tumbling again.

By Admin

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