Data Dependent Day As Fed Refuses To Commit

 | Jul 30, 2015 06:56AM ET

Yesterday’s FOMC statement did exactly what many expected and offered little new insight into the Federal Reserve’s interest rate intentions, instead putting all of the emphasis on economic data between now and the next meeting in September.

There were few changes between yesterday’s statement and that from June and it’s probably not worthwhile reading too much into the changes that were made. The fact that the Fed now needs to see “some further improvement in the labor market” makes little difference given that it was already very healthy. Two months of 250,000 job creation doesn’t necessarily guarantee a September hike any more than 180,000 would.

The claim that the “underutilization of labour markets has diminished” may be slightly more significant, as the inclusion of “somewhat” on the end of this last month implies there is still some way to go. Tighter labour markets usually lead to higher wages and with that, inflationary pressures. This belief could be why the below target inflation levels are not a concern to the Fed at the moment. Of course, this is just speculation and the reality is, again, this one word makes very little difference.

Overall, the statement was mildly hawkish and leaves a September rate hike on the table but everything depends on the data in the next couple of months. There is clearly a willingness to raise rates this year at the Fed but if the data over the next couple of months softens, they will not have any issue with waiting until December or just testing the water with a 0.1% hike.

With a September hike now being entirely data dependent, there may be heightened sensitivity to key U.S. data points, especially as we near the meeting. The first hurdle is today’s advanced GDP reading for the second quarter which will be key given that the economy stalled in the opening months of the year.

The U.S. is expected to have grown 2.6% in the last quarter, which under the circumstances is neither anything to write home about or something to panic over. I think the Fed would like to see a stronger rebound from the first quarter, although one of the key headwinds remains – strong dollar – as we’re seeing in company earnings at the moment. We’ll also get trade balance and jobless claims figures from the U.S. this afternoon.

There are a number of European data points being released this morning including unemployment and inflation figures from Germany and Spain, and a range of sentiment indicators for the eurozone. None of these are particularly heavy hitting releases but could contribute to some volatility in the markets this morning.

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