Fed Chief’s Words Awaited As Treasury Yield Rally Advances

 | Mar 17, 2021 10:11AM ET

Word comes down from Constitution Avenue today on how long the Fed thinks these zero rates might last.

It won’t be in the form of any promises, obviously, but the Fed’s “dot plot” of future rates might get a closer look than normal from investors veering between excitement over reopening and fear of overheating. Last December’s dot-plot showed only one Fed official predicting a rate hike next year and five seeing one in 2023. The question is, will today’s report show more hawkishness?

Leading up to the end of the meeting, trading this morning might be a “rinse and repeat” of what we saw yesterday, with everyone waiting around for the Fed. It seems unlikely that Fed Chairman Jerome Powell will say anything that much different, but this meeting has more meaning than most because we’re on the verge of the vaccine taking hold and the economy picking up. There could be a lot of change before the Fed’s next meeting in late April.

No one, not even Fed governors, knows for sure where rates might be a year or two from now. That being said, today offers the first road map of their extended thinking since December, a time when the 10-year Treasury yield was near record lows at around 0.9%. Since then, it’s stormed its way up to above 1.6%, the highest in more than a year. By this morning, it reached 1.67%, and this gets back to the recent economic numbers looking pretty good.

h2 It’s Not Price, it’s Pace/h2

Even a yield of 1.67% is still very low, historically, but it’s the speed of the rally that has some investors worried. Not that you’d know, because stocks are still flirting with record highs. However, the 10% recent correction suffered by the Nasdaq 100 tells you where the market might feel some pain if yields continue climbing. Growth stocks, including Tech, tend to take it on the chin when yields rise, because they’re highly valued based on hopes for strong future growth. Climbing yields could get in the way of that, and the market’s focus right now is on 2%. A rally to that level would almost certainly cause some soul searching, so to speak.

Another thing people could watch for is the Fed’s outlook on economic growth and inflation, and anything Powell or the Fed’s statement says about future bond-buying plans. The Fed’s been steadfast saying it has no changes in store for the $120 billion a month purchases intended to put a brake on rates. However, with Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) recently predicting 8% U.S. economic growth this year, some analysts wonder if the Fed needs to be greasing the skids quite this much, and whether it might risk overheating by doing that.

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One question on some minds is whether the Fed might decide to do a “twist” and buy longer-term bonds instead of shorter-term ones. The 30-year recently traded at a 14-month high near 2.4% and mortgage rates climbed above 3%. Housing has been a shining star for the economy and the Fed probably doesn’t want to let that get snuffed out. Meanwhile, media reports say companies are rushing to borrow before yields get too high.

Powell, who holds a press conference soon after the meeting ends at 2 p.m. ET, is probably going to do his best not to upset any apple carts. In recent appearances, he’s stressed that the economy still has a long way to go toward recovering from the pandemic, and that unemployment remains too high. He’s said that the Fed is willing to let inflation run above its 2% target if that helps get the economy back to full employment, and if inflation gets tricky the Fed has ways to handle that.

h2 Besides the Fed: Nike, FedEx and China Talks/h2

Tomorrow afternoon, FedEx (NYSE:FDX) reports its quarterly results, which are often considered to be a proxy for economic activity. Those results come into sharper focus after the disappointing February retail sales number released yesterday. We also expect to hear from Nike (NYSE:NKE), whose earnings are often a good barometer of how Chinese consumer demand is doing.

Speaking of China, we talked yesterday about this week’s discussions between the U.S. and China, which might include trade as a subject.

The real question is whether the two countries can expand their conversation beyond agriculture, where trade is already booming. That may be in the works. The U.S. and China are setting up a semiconductor working group to ease tension in industry and improve supply chain security, the Hong Kong-based South China Post reported late last week.

The paper added that there’s speculation the Biden administration could relax certain trade restrictions against Chinese semiconductor companies to help ease a global shortage of chips, a move that could help Chinese firms. That remains to be seen, but keep an eye on the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index, which fell into correction this month. Any progress on China trade might give it a boost.

h2 One For You, 19 For Me?/h2

A potential source of pressure ahead might be investors grappling with something they haven’t had to very much over the last 25 years: The possibility of rising federal taxes.

Bloomberg reported that the Biden administration is considering a package that would reportedly include: Raising the corporate tax from 21% to 28%; increasing the income tax rate on people making more than $400,000; expanding the estate tax; paring back tax preferences on pass-through businesses such as limited-liability companies; and setting up a higher capital gains tax rate for individuals making at least $1 million.

Just a few years ago, Congress delivered one of the biggest tax cuts in history, so this is kind of a 180. If tax discussion gets to be more front and center in the weeks and months ahead, you could see it take a little wind out of the market’s sails (see more below).

h2 Turnaround Tuesday—Again/h2

Maybe think of Tuesday as a dress rehearsal for today. Major indices chopped up and they chopped down, trading “both sides of unchanged,” as traders in the open outcry pits used to say. Eventually things finished mixed. The NASDAQ Composite managed to finish slightly higher but other indices dragged after a very firm Monday.

It was the second week in a row that things went in reverse from Monday to Tuesday. More choppiness is likely today until the Fed meeting. Key data comes tomorrow with weekly initial jobless claims. Analysts expect 710,000, down from 712,000 a week ago, Briefing.com said.

One feature yesterday worth watching for today was profit taking in a lot of the same travel-related stocks (airlines and cruise lines) that had popped higher Monday. Some of this might have hinged on news of new virus case surges in Europe where vaccine availability is an issue.

As reopening stocks faded, the quarantine/stay at home ones continued to look strong. Semiconductors, for instance, have had a very nice start to the week. They could be getting help from news that several major automobile companies cited chip shortages getting in the way of their production. A shortage would probably raise chip prices, helping their makers.

Also, all the so-called “FAANG” stocks are coming back nicely from recent weakness. Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) and Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) were leaders in that category yesterday. As we’ve seen often in the last few years, Tech stocks do go down, but haven’t stayed down for long. We’ll see if that continues to be the case after the most recent market correction in that sector. So far in pre-market trading Wednesday, the tech-heavy COMP was under more pressure than other major indices, but trading is likely to be thin across the market this morning as traders wait for the Fed.

Rising yields had weighed on Tech and could continue to hinder progress in the rest of the stock market, depending on what the Fed says today. Meanwhile, volatility really has pulled back. The Cboe Volatility Index (VIX) closed below 20 for the first time since Feb. 21, 2020. Again, we’ll see if anything changes as Powell talks.

Crude is down this morning after the International Energy Agency (IEA) called a “supercycle” for the commodity unlikely in its latest forecasts, MarketWatch reported. Oil inventories still look “ample,” IEA said.