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(Repeats 0700 GMT item without changes)
By Mike Dolan
LONDON, Feb 15 (Reuters) -
Market pricing tends to swing back and forth like a pendulum around eventual outcomes - and investors may now have to brace for another tough period working out the amplitude of higher U.S. interest rate possibilities.
Money market guesswork on peak Federal Reserve rates swung back higher this month following surprisingly tight January jobs and inflation readouts. A once almost outlandish 6% top now seems to have crept onto the edge of the risk radar.
A Fed policy rate peak at 6% - more than 150 basis points higher than the current target and 75bp above standing futures market assumptions of the terminal rate - is still far from consensus that is now firmly in line with the central bank's own central assumption of 5.0-5.25%.
But most of those forecasters admit the balance of risks on their outlook for peak rates is now tilted even higher, and for traders who had pencilled in a terminal rate of less than 2%little over a year ago, the full gamut of possibilities is now being entertained.
A combination of January's jobs and inflation numbers has at least stopped markets undershooting the Fed's 'dot plot' guidance, following months in which futures doubted both the need and willingness to follow through with tightening to that extent.
It's been a sobering couple of weeks.
Markets now tally with a 5.25% peak and, just as significantly, see rates still above 5% by year-end - at least one rate rise higher than current levels.
Two-year Treasury yields hit their highest in three months at 4.65%, now on par with the current Fed policy rate.
Any thought of credit easing anytime soon from where it is today - so central to the early-year market optimism - is being taken off the table bit by bit.
As 2023 recession risks recede, Fed policymakers talk tough and one of the few remaining dovish board members - Vice Chair Lael Brainard - exits the council, there's been seismic change in tone at least.
Glenmede chief investment officer Jason Pride said the inflation update dented the "immaculate disinflation" narrative.
Morgan Stanley's Matthew Hornbach described the payrolls as a "mood changing" print that's seen markets chase rates higher as if gripped by a sort of reverse FOMO - fear of missing out.
Only last week, JPMorgan boss Jamie Dimon warned that the Fed could lift rates above the 5% mark if inflation stayed "sticky". "People should take a deep breath on this one before they declare victory," he said.