Fed: Everything Is Improving, Hence We Lower Growth Forecasts

 | Sep 22, 2016 07:15AM ET

Thursday September 22: Five things the markets are talking about

Can we shout deja vu loud enough? The Fed came with the same story, just inserted different figures and months.

Chair Yellen and company left rates unchanged yesterday, but pointed to an increased likelihood of a hike in November or December – if they don’t, their credibility is shot.

Near term risks are roughly balanced. The three FOMC members who dissented (George, Mester, and Rosengren) in favor of a hike were offset by continued revisions lower to Fed’s economic forecasts (lower 2016 GDP forecast – 1.7-2.0% vs. prior 1.8-2.0%).

In her press conference, Chair Yellen noted that they chose not to raise rates mostly because of continued labor market slack and low inflation, a complaint that all G7 central banks lean on.

The market reaction has been somewhat benign. The event risks are running out this calendar year to break the monotony of current forex trading ranges.

Next up is the U.S presidential election. Will that two-horse race have stamina unlike the U.K Brexit surprise?

1. Global equities rally on Fed decision

The era of cheap money remains and is providing support for stocks, bonds and commodities.

Asian and European shares have rallied overnight; getting the green light from the Fed who left interest rates unchanged and slowed the pace of future hikes yesterday – its projection for increases in 2017 was trimmed to two from three. A weaker dollar is also helping to lift commodity prices.

Markets in Asia were mostly closed with small gains, with Hong Kong adding +0.4% and Australia adding +0.7%.

In early trading in Europe, the Stoxx Europe 600 has rallied + 0.7%, led by gains in oil and gas and mining companies. Similar story with the FTSE 100, commodity and mining stocks are leading the gains.

U.S futures are little changed after yesterday’s rally of +1%.

Indices: Stoxx50 +1.0% at 3,017, FTSE +0.7% at 6,880, DAX +1.2% at 10,563, CAC 40 +1.1% at 4,459, IBEX 35 +1.2% at 8,862, FTSE MIB +1.2% at 16,543, SMI +0.5% at 8,270, S&P 500 Futures flat]