Weekly Inflation Outlook: Fed Hikes Have Damaged Growth, But Not Inflation

 | Oct 24, 2022 21:02

Bond market behavior last week was somewhat disturbing as 10-year nominal rates shot past 4% and 10-year real rates got as high as 1.75% before pulling back a trifle. This was despite Fed speakers starting to soften the message, signaling that there is probably a taper coming soon in the rate of tightening.

Early in the week, investors roundly misinterpreted comments by Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari. He remarked that if core inflation continued to surprise on the high side, he thought it would be appropriate to continue tightening. Bonds took this very poorly. But it is actually a cheerful message and a pivot to a more-dovish perspective (admittedly, from one of the Fed officials whose dove/hawk score swings wildly depending on the day).

Previously, Fed speakers had generally indicated that they wanted (and expected) to see in my monthly CPI analysis , Median CPI has increased year on year (yoy) for the last 14 consecutive months. It will probably peak in December, right on schedule for a downshift from the Fed.

The shift in message from wanting to see a clear movement lower to instead wanting to just see a cessation of surprising new highs is very significant and likely signals that—if the numbers over the next few months don’t accelerate further—the Fed is probably on a 75 basis points (bp), 50bp, 25bp trajectory over the next few meetings. On Friday, San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly said policymakers should be thinking about reducing the size of rate hikes: “we might find ourselves, and the markets have certainly priced this in, with another 75 bp increase, but I would really recommend people don’t take that away as, it’s 75 forever.” She opined that 50bp or 25bp would make more sense as the Fed gets closer to the end. St. Louis Fed James Bullard sang the same tune:

“Once you’re at the right level, then you can just make minor adjustments at that point. Maybe to stay where you are, maybe to go a little bit higher, based on incoming data.”

These are messages of a turn towards gradualism as the Fed reaches what they think is a terminal rate. Since inflation is a lagging indicator (as Daly said the prior week), the Fed should not wait until inflation is sharply in retreat before pausing…and that’s what Kashkari said.

They all are aware that they’d rather pause or cease tightening because they choose to, and not because something broke in the markets. But the continued rise in long-term rates, and the disturbing continuing rise in implied volatilities (see chart of the MOVE index, a measure of bond market volatilities) despite the Fed’s moderating message, is an early warning. As we head into the last two months of 2022, we are probably closer to a liquidity accident than we’d like to think.