For over a decade, Fed forward guidance and QE have suppressed interest rate volatility. A shift away from this communication strategy would likely cause volatility to return to the more "normal," higher levels seen before the 2008 global financial crisis.

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Emerging market central banks' hawkish commentary while cutting rates reinforces market stability. This low volatility, in turn, gives them confidence to continue the cutting cycle. This feedback loop can make low-volatility periods surprisingly persistent, as the actions and outcomes mutually reinforce each other.

Ben Hunt highlights Ben Bernanke’s admission that the Fed's communication policy became a primary tool. It was used intentionally to change market behavior by telling a coordinated story, not merely to communicate the Fed's internal analysis.

If incoming Fed Chair Kevin Warsh reduces public communication, it could increase market uncertainty about future policy. This lack of clear forward guidance may lead investors to demand a higher risk premium for holding long-term bonds, causing the U.S. Treasury yield curve to steepen, all else being equal.

When bond prices exhibit short-term mean reversion (up one day, down the next), it's a quantitative sign of deep uncertainty. This reflects the market and the Fed struggling to choose between fighting inflation and addressing weakening employment, leading to no clear trend until one indicator decisively breaks out.

Often seen as standard practice, explicit forward guidance is a recent innovation. It was created out of desperation post-2008 when rates were zero and the Fed needed a tool to reassure markets it wouldn't prematurely hike. Successful chairs like Volcker and Greenspan never used it.

The Federal Reserve bases policy on official government labor data, which lags real-time private sector data that markets already reflect. This delay causes the Fed to 'drag its feet' on necessary policy changes like rate cuts, creating a predictable tension and period of volatility that astute investors can navigate.

The bond market will become volatile not when rates hit a certain number, but when the market perceives the Fed's cutting cycle has ended and the next move could be a hike. This "legitimate pause" will cause a rapid, painful steepening of the yield curve.

The Fed's sudden dovish turn, despite admitting no new information was gathered, shows it reacts to immediate pressures like a weakening labor market rather than adhering to long-term inflation targets. This makes its forward guidance unreliable for investors.

A Fed Chair's ability to calmly manage market expectations through public speaking and forward guidance is more critical than their economic forecasting prowess. A poor communicator can destroy market sentiment and inadvertently add risk premium, undermining their own policy goals.

The Fed has steadily moved from Alan Greenspan's deliberate obfuscation toward greater transparency. However, there's a view that potential new leadership could reverse this trend, making Fed messaging more obscure and harder for markets to interpret in the coming year.