Did Another Interest-Rate-Hike Forecast Just Bite The Dust?

 | Sep 06, 2016 07:33AM ET

Hawkish CME data at last week’s close.

But some analysts haven’t thrown in the towel on expecting tighter policy for this month. “The speech by Chair Yellen at Jackson Hole suggested a relatively low bar” for employment growth, Goldman Sachs) outlined in a note to clients over the weekend.

“Back in the spring, the committee was ready to go in June or July, but then the weak May payroll report and the Brexit vote interfered. Now both of these worries have dissipated.”

But Dennis Gartman, who pens a widely read newsletter, begs to differ, CNBC reports:

In his Monday letter, Gartman said the one-tenth decline in hours worked from 34.4 hours to 34.3 hours was “the rough equivalent of actually losing at least 200,000 non-farm payroll workers in the period in question.”

The work week decline, reported in the last monthly payrolls release before the Federal Open Market Committee meeting on Sept. 20-21, effectively scotched a rate hike, he said.

“This is the number that caught us off, and this is the number that we think shall make it all but impossible for the FOMC to vote to raise the (overnight) fed funds rate at the (September) meeting,” Gartman wrote.

The Treasury market offers a degree of support for thinking that the Fed may forgo another rate hike this month. The 2-year yield, which is highly sensitive to policy changes, is still above its recent lows, but the 0.80% rate as of Sep. 2 still reflects a downward bias for the year-to-date trend.