It's Time Traders Started Listening To The Fed

 | Aug 31, 2016 13:07

Quick Recap

When the Fed tightened rates last December they had a clear bias toward 3 or 4 more tightenings in 2016. But events such as the market turmoil of earlier in the year, concerns about Brexit, and a rogue minuscule 24,000 rise in May's non-farm payrolls kept giving them need to pause in this path of interest rate normalisation.

But now as these concerns have washed away the Fed is signalling it's back on track to hike rates, perhaps as soon as September. It's time the market started listening.

What You Need To Know

It's easy to look at the Fed's actions over the past couple of years and say they'll always find a way to not raise rates.

After the taper tantrum a few years back scared the heck out of traders, and the Fed, the US central bank has been clear in its warnings about the need to normalise rates.

Yet after the best part of two years worth of warnings the FOMC has tightened just once in December 2015.

So it's no wonder that following a mantra of "actions speak louder than words" most traders seem to feel like they'll deal with the rate hike when they see it. Or, perhaps simply that after the next tightening the Fed will go quiet again for many months, perhaps another year.

But that is not the signal that the Fed itself is sending.

After Fed chair Janet Yellen said at Jackson Hole that the case to raise rates had strengthened “in light of the continued solid performance of the labour market and our outlook for economic activity and inflation” traders thought that's not too strong and stocks rallied. Markets initially read Yellen as relatively dovish but a follow conversation between Fed vice-chair Stanley Fischer and CNBC changed all that.

But then Fed vice-chair Stanley Fischer and CNBC changed all that. Reuters reported that “Fischer was asked on CNBC whether people should “be on the edge of our seat” for a rate hike in September, and for more than one policy tightening before year end. He answered: “I think what the Chair said today was consistent with answering yes to both of your questions, but these are not things we know until we see the data.”

It seems so far this week that only Forex traders are taking Fischer and his colleagues like Loretta Mester who told the FT on the sidelines of Jackson Hole that the case for a rate rise was compelling.