3 Things Under the Radar This Week

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Investing.com - Here’s a look at three things that were under the radar this past week.

1. IMF Rate Policy for ‘Inevitable’ Crisis

While rate watchers and currency traders were looking for any new inflection in the voice of Fed Chairman Jerome Powell, the International Monetary Fund laid out a game plan for battling a potential global downturn.

The plan would see central banks implement negative interest rates, given their currently low levels.

As fretting over still-unresolved trade tensions, particularly between the U.S. and China, continues, the IMF took preemptive action to enable monetary policymakers to combat an "inevitable" crisis.

The organization explained that many central banks reduced policy interest rates to zero during the global financial crisis to boost growth and noted that, ten years later, interest rates remain low in most countries.

“While the global economy has been recovering, future downturns are inevitable,” the IMF warned. “Crises have historically required interest rate cuts in the order of three to six percentage points but only three OECD countries - Turkey, Mexico and Iceland - have that kind of room to maneuver today.”

The IMF staff study intends to show how central banks can set up a system that would make deeply negative interest rates a feasible option and comes even as the Federal Reserve is struggling to convince markets that they could move forward from the current range of 2.25% to 2.5% with two more rate increases this year.

But markets are skeptical, placing a probability of only about 4% on one increase in December, compared to odds of nearly 12% for a cut by the end of the year, according to fed funds futures.

2. We Have Nothing to Fear, but …

The volatility index (VIX) quietly hit its lowest since level since October on Wednesday.

That made sense given the continued rally. Following the most recent downturn in December, the VIX has plunged more than 50%, while the S&P 500 has surged about 15%.

The Dow eked out its seventh weekly win Friday after clawing back nearly all its losses mere minutes before the close. But the geopolitical headlines that were so prevalent in December are reappearing and weighed on stocks this week.

While it may be too early to call a short-term bottom in the VIX, the argument is not without a merit. There's plenty of uncertainty to go around in the coming the weeks, which may not only send the fear index into overdrive, but limit risk appetite.

The threat of another U.S. government shutdown as early as next week looms. There's little evidence so far that Congress and the White House is closing in on a budget deal by Feb. 15.