Don’t Be Influenced By Powell’s Upcoming Speech

 | Aug 25, 2022 02:06AM ET

With oil prices rallying on the hope of output cuts by OPEC+, the PMs benefited from the enthusiasm. For example, gold rose by 0.73%, silver by 0.78%, the GDX ETF by 1.70% and the GDXJ ETF by 2.08%. Moreover, profit-taking helped push the USD Index lower by 0.39%. However, long-term Treasury yields jumped, and with quantitative tightening (QT) set to double next week, the PMs’ optimism is unlikely to last.h2 The Bull/Bear Narratives/h2

While the consensus assumes that peak inflation means the Fed is closer to the end of its tightening cycle than the beginning, I’ve warned on numerous occasions that normalizing the metric to 2% will result in much more economic pain than currently expected. Therefore, while the financial markets tread water in anticipation of Fed Chairman Jerome Powell’s Jackson Hole speech, the reality is that his words don’t change the medium-term ramifications.

For example, the bears are hoping that Powell will reaffirm his commitment to reducing inflation on Aug. 26, resulting in lower asset prices as the hawkish realities resurface. In contrast, the bulls hope that Powell will strike a dovish tone and help re-ignite the risk rally that pushed the S&P 500 above 4,300 and helped uplift gold, silver and mining stocks.

However, while sentiment moves markets in the short term, nothing that Powell says will change the deteriorating U.S. economic outlook. Furthermore, Powell was profoundly dovish during his post-FOMC press conference on July 27, and other than looser financial conditions, little has changed fundamentally that signals a 180 in his communication.

As such, it’s prudent to look past the daily narratives and focus on the realities that manifest when the Fed attempts to rein in unanchored inflation.

Speaking of which, the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield closed above 3% on Aug. 23, and the recently elusive milestone helps the benchmark inch closer to its 2022 highs.