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The Federal Reserve has a limited window to hike rates. If they don't act by their July meeting, falling inflation data combined with the proximity to the presidential election will make further hikes politically and practically untenable, paving the way for a "hawkish hold."
The Federal Reserve is tightening policy just as forward-looking inflation indicators are pointing towards a significant decline. This pro-cyclical move, reacting to lagging data from a peak inflation print, is a "classic Fed error" that unnecessarily tightens financial conditions and risks derailing the economy.
The Federal Reserve is forced into a hawkish, inflation-fighting stance because the labor market and stock market are strong while inflation remains above target. This situation removes any justification for easing policy, making inflation the sole focus.
Increasing political influence, including presidential pressure and politically-aligned board appointments, is compromising the Federal Reserve's independence. This suggests future monetary policy may be more dovish than economic data warrants, as the Fed is pushed to prioritize short-term growth ahead of elections.
Despite the Federal Reserve signaling rate hikes due to high inflation forecasts, Morgan Stanley's economists predict lower inflation for the year. This contrarian view is based on the recent significant drop in energy prices, which reduces a core inflationary pressure and may lead the Fed to remain on hold.
Despite the Fed's hawkish statements, the market may have already hit "peak hawkishness." Underlying data like falling oil prices and inflation swaps suggest disinflation is coming. The Fed is seen as reacting to old data, implying its current tough stance is a lagging indicator and likely to soften.
The market's "run it hot" narrative assumes supportive monetary policy, but the Fed is unlikely to cut rates before the current chair's term potentially ends. With a new chair possible in June, this creates a four-month window where the Fed may not ease, creating a "liquidity pocket" and risk for markets.
Investors are pushing back on predictions of a Fed rate hike in H1 2027. The primary reason is the belief that a new Fed chair would be reluctant to signal hikes just months before the US midterm elections, regardless of the economic rationale.
The Federal Reserve can tolerate inflation running above its 2% target as long as long-term inflation expectations remain anchored. This is the critical variable that gives them policy flexibility. The market's belief in the Fed's long-term credibility is what matters most.
While equities had a mixed reaction to inflation data, the bond market shows clearer concern. FedWatch data reveals a significant shift in expectations over the past month, with the probability of a 25 basis point rate hike by year-end rising to 30%, while the probability of a cut has diminished.
The Fed faces a catch-22: current interest rates are too low to contain inflation but too high to prevent a recession. Unable to solve both problems simultaneously, the central bank has adopted a 'wait and see' approach, holding rates steady until either inflation or slowing growth becomes the more critical issue to address.