Is Pressure Building For Another U.S. Rate Cut?

 | Feb 19, 2020 07:51AM ET

Looking at a select set of recent economic releases suggests the US economy is humming along, providing room for the Federal Reserve to let current monetary policy glide forward on autopilot. But a closer look at key trends in the Treasury market and the monetary base – along with the economic challenges roiling China and increasingly spilling out to the global economy – suggest the future may be more uncertain and risky than widely assumed with respect to evaluating the case for rate changes.

For the moment, the crowd is pricing in a low probability that the Fed will cut its target rate at the next FOMC policy meeting scheduled for March 18. Fed funds futures this morning are pricing in a 90% probability that the current 1.50%-to-1.75% target will hold, based on CME data.

The expected bias for standing pat (defined as a 50%-plus probability estimate for no change) extends out to the June meeting, when the current estimate is pricing in a 53% probability of leaving the target rate unchanged. The rate-cut probability rises above 50% for the first time for the July meeting. The question is whether events are unfolding that will change the calculus (in the market and at the Fed) in favor of cutting sooner rather than later?

For some perspective, let’s consider several factors on the short list, starting with a broad look at the US economic trend. Recent data in the critical employment and consumer corners certainly look relatively encouraging. Private-sector hiring picked up in January: companies hired 206,000 workers, a solid gain by the standards of recent history. Retail sales in January also posted a healthy advance, rising 0.3% — the fourth straight monthly gain.

The upbeat numbers offer support for thinking that US economy remains in a moderate growth mode. True, the outlook for first-quarter GDP growth has dipped (based on the median nowcasts for several models). But even taking this GDP estimate at face value suggests the early 2020 profile continues to imply a continuation of the modest growth in the second half of last year.

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But there are hints that Fed policy, beyond the glare of the usual data releases, is slowly but persistently shifting toward a dovish bias. Consider, for instance, that the real one-year change in the high-powered money or M0 money supply – posted a gain in January for the first time in nearly two years. That’s just one piece of policy trends, but it’s a sign that the modestly hawkish bias of late continues to fade.