Look Out Below!

    0
    243

    by Jim Rickards, Daily Reckoning:

    Just as I predicted, the Fed raised the fed funds target rate (also called the policy rate) today by 0.75%.

    The new target rate is a range of 3.75–4.00%, the highest since 2008. This is the sixth rate hike this year and the fourth consecutive 0.75% rate hike.

    That’s the steepest, fastest series of Fed rate hikes since the Paul Volcker days in the early 1980s.

    Today’s hike demonstrates that the Fed is still deeply serious about fighting inflation, cooling the economy and withdrawing its easy-money stimulus.

    TRUTH LIVES on at https://sgtreport.tv/

    I said that I predicted today’s move, but in reality the Fed telegraphed it in advance through a combination of leaks to favored reporters in the mainstream media. That’s part of the “no drama Fed.”

    No Surprises, Please

    They don’t want to surprise markets or disrupt markets, and they didn’t. The 0.75% rate hike was fully expected by market participants and was fully priced into stock and bond prices before today’s announcement.

    That’s part of the reason why the stock market immediately spiked after the 2 p.m. announcement. Markets can handle disappointing news as long as they expect it.

    More importantly, markets spiked because the Fed’s statement gave investors hope that a policy change could be coming, saying it “will take into account the cumulative tightening of monetary policy, the lags with which monetary policy affects economic activity and inflation and economic and financial developments.”

    A Bucket of Ice Water

    But at Jay Powell’s post-announcement press conference, he threw cold water on investors’ heads when he said, “We still have some ways to go and incoming data since our last meeting suggests that the ultimate level of interest rates will be higher than previously expected.”

    In the Q&A session that followed, he added, “It’s very premature to be thinking about pausing.”

    The stock market erased all its post-announcement gains and sank into negative territory as it digested Powell’s comments.

    He’s basically saying, “Sorry guys, I know we’ve conditioned you for years to expect a return to easy money. But this is a different time. We’re dealing with serious inflation here. And we’ve got a long way to go before we can ease up. There won’t be any ‘pivot’ anytime soon.”

    Why the discrepancy between the Fed’s initial statement that hinted at the possibility of a pause and Powell’s post-announcement comments that essentially refuted the possibility of one?

    The Fed Floats a Trial Balloon?

    Perhaps the Fed’s initial statement was meant as a trial balloon to test the market’s reaction. If the market remained flat or declined, the market would have “gotten the point” and he wouldn’t need to add any hawkish language to kill a potential rally.

    But since the market took off following the announcement, Powell made his hawkish statements to squash the rally.

    If that was the plan, it certainly worked. The Dow crashed 505 points by the end of the day, about a 900-point collapse from its post-announcement peak. Meanwhile, the S&P lost 96 and the Nasdaq lost 366 points.

    Now What?

    The question now is what’s the Fed’s next move?

    The next FOMC meeting is Dec. 14. The Fed will certainly raise rates at the meeting. The rate hike will most likely be 0.50%, although a 0.75% hike cannot be ruled out depending on inflation and unemployment data received between now and mid-December.

    We can be confident that we’ll know the Fed’s next policy move in advance. As noted above, we’ll know because they’ll leak it in the week ahead of the meeting so the markets can price it in.

    Remember, it’s the “no drama” Fed. I’ll watch the data carefully and provide ongoing forecast updates as the date approaches.

    Read More @ DailyReckoning.com