Rate Cuts: Hope Is Not A Strategy

 | May 07, 2019 03:11PM ET

Last Wednesday, the FOMC left its policy stance unchanged. This decision was consistent with the message sent after the previous meeting and was not contradicted by speeches given by FOMC participants in the intermeeting period. This action was also consistent with the consensus view of economists who follow the Fed. Indeed, of the 39 economists responding to the April 23–25 Bloomberg poll, only two had forecast a rate cut in 2019 while the rest had the funds rate target steady through 2020.[1]

Despite that data, the stock market declined after the FOMC statement was released, indicating that a rate reduction had been expected but not delivered. The market continued to decline over the next two days. In contrast, on Wednesday, May 1, the ten-year Treasury rate rose at about 10 AM and then jumped even higher just before the release of the FOMC statement at 2 PM. It then dipped slightly before the meeting, as the Bloomberg chart below indicates. It then recovered to pre-10 o’clock announcement levels after Chairman Powell’s press conference.

How can we explain these reactions to the information flowing from the FOMC meeting? Why was the stock market’s reaction more prolonged than the Treasury market’s was?