Dollar Not Likely To Get Much Support From The FOMC

 | Jul 10, 2014 05:58AM ET

h3 FOMC minutes present dovish view

Well, I was wrong about the FOMC minutes: in fact they presented a more dovish view than people had expected. As a result, Fed Funds futures expectations for 2017 fell almost 6 bps while bond yields declined modestly (from 3 bps in the 2 years to almost 1 bp in the 10 year). The dollar weakened all around, against both G10 and EM currencies.

The FOMC members agreed to wind down their Quantitative Easing program of bond-buying in October, as was widely expected. There was also a technical discussion of how they would manage the money markets as they moved to liberalize interest rates. Without going into the details, it implies that the actual Fed Funds rate (and hence money market rates as well) will be able to trade below the Fed Funds target rate at least until they start hiking rates and perhaps even afterwards, which means that the actual Fed Funds rate is unlikely to rise for at least a year. Moreover, “many participants” also agree to delay ending the reinvestment of maturing mortgage-backed securities until after they had started hiking rates, even though that’s contrary to what the FOMC said when it announced its exit strategy principles in June 2011. Both these measures are seen as relatively dovish, which was one reason for the move down in interest rates.

Another surprise for the markets was just how concerned the FOMC is about inflation remaining too low even while core PCE inflation has accelerated to a recent pace above their 2% target (+2.1% annualized in the past three months). Their emphasis on the risks of too low inflation goes a long way towards explaining why Fed Chair Janet Yellen dismissed the recent rise in inflation as “noise.” Apparently she wasn’t just talking for herself.

It’s true though that there is disagreement among the FOMC members. With regards to inflation, “(s)ome others expected a faster pickup in inflation or saw upside risks to inflation expectations because they anticipated a more rapid decline in economic slack.” There was also disagreement on the employment situation. "Many judged that slack remained elevated," the minutes said, but "several participants pointed out that both long- and short-term unemployment and measures that include marginally attached workers had declined." This divergence in views is one reason why officials keep warning about the extremely low volatility and implied volatility in the markets. What they are saying in effect is that the FOMC itself is uncertain about what’s going to happen, so it’s surprising that the markets are so certain. I expect that as time goes on, this divergence will become more and more acute and more distinct as the two sides make their views public through speeches and interviews. That could help to raise volatility somewhat.

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The implications for the dollar are that it is not likely to get much support from the FOMC, at least not immediately. With inflation rising and interest rates falling, US real interest rates are declining, which is likely to prevent the dollar from gaining overall. We will know more after today’s speech by Vice Chair Stanley Fischer (see below) and Yellen’s testimony to Congress next week. In the final analysis, the FOMC is really no better placed to know what’s happening than the market is. Everything depends on the data.