Fed Preview: Hike May Be Expected But One Vote Could Shift Frequency

 | Jun 12, 2018 05:03AM ET

  • Volatility surrounding the possibility of four rate hikes in 2018 has been escalating
  • A shift in one Fed member’s forecast from three to four will alter the median outlook
  • Recent trade tensions make a change in the outlook unlikely
  • As markets gear up for the start of the Federal Reserve’s two-day policy meeting which begins today, Tuesday, the longstanding expectation has been that the main outcome will be a 25 basis-point rate increase to a range of 1.75%-2.00%. With odds above 90% for this to happen according to Investing.com’s Fed Rate Monitor Tool, the move itself likely won't fuel any market worries.

    However, traders are craving clarification on the broader outlook for monetary policy. And a single shift in the voting pattern of Fed policymakers could trigger renewed volatility and increased market jitters.

    The rate decision, scheduled to be announced at 2:00PM ET (18:00GMT) on Wednesday, will be accompanied by not only the statement from the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) but also the quarterly update of policymakers’ economic projections, followed by a press conference with Fed chairman Jerome Powell that could provide additional clues to the U.S. central bank’s outlook.

    h3 Interest Rate Frequency Bets Stir Volatility/h3

    As part of economic projections issued this past March, the so-called “dot plot”—which anonymously provides individual Fed policymakers’ forecasts for interest rates—showed that the median bet was for a total of three hikes in 2018 with an additional three next year, as part of the Fed's plan for “further gradual increases in the Federal funds rate.”

    However, incremental increases in inflation readings, on the back of an extremely tight labor market stoked speculation that the Fed could move as many as four times in 2018, including the increase which already occurred in March.

    That in turn fueled market turbulence, beginning in February, which ended with the first monthly decline for the S&P 500 (-3.9%) in nearly a year. It also pummeled the Dow’s year-to-date gains, pushing them back down to 1.5% after the blue chip index experienced its best start to the year since 1987.

    As well, the murmurs over a more aggressive Fed began to notably rise. Arguably they reached a crescendo at the end of that month when Powell testified to Congress that “some of the headwinds the U.S. economy faced in previous years have turned into tailwinds," citing stimulative fiscal policy and firmer demand for U.S. exports. “In the FOMC’s view, further gradual rate increases in the Federal funds rate will best promote attainment of both of our objectives,” he added.

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    Market reaction (or overreaction) indicated that traders understood Powell’s comments to be hawkish, confirming the possibility of four hikes this year. The odds continued to strengthen as positive economic data and higher inflation readings cemented the idea that the Fed may add an additional rate hike to the three it had already predicted for 2018.

    Flash forward to the end of May however, when markets were shaken by political developments in Italy and fears of a breakup of the eurozone. The threat of a financial crisis that could shake the global economy canceled out bets on a fourth hike in December. The idea of an additional hike that would push interest rates to 2.25%-2.50% took a nosedive.