Looking For A Fed Pivot

 | Oct 06, 2022 01:58PM ET

When will the Federal Reserve cease and desist its policy of raising interest rates and tightening policy? No one knows, including the Fed, for a simple reason: the path of inflation remains uncertain. The possibilities for reading the tea leaves, however, are endless. Let’s check in with some of the usual suspects for an update.

We can start with the talking heads at the Fed. Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic on Wednesday suggested a pivot may come after two more rounds of rate hikes at the upcoming Nov. 2 and Dec. 14 FOMC meetings. He said:

“Ideally, I would like to reach a point where policy is moderately restrictive — between 4% and 4.5% by the end of this year — and then hold at that level and see how the economy and prices react.”

The Fed funds target rate is currently 3.0%-3.25% and Fed funds futures are pricing in high odds that it will rise in two doses through the end of the year.

Trend behavior in Treasury yields suggests as much. Notably, the key 2-year rate, which is considered the most policy-sensitive spot on the yield curve, remains well above the Fed funds rate. That spread in favor of the 2-year yield suggests that market sentiment continues anticipate that a hawkish outlook will prevail for the near term. When the 2-year yield makes a convincing U-turn, the case will strengthen for anticipating a Fed pivot. By that standard, the odds of a pivot remain low.