Fed Outlook Puts US Dollar and Equities In Troubling Position

DailyFX.com -

Talking Points

  • The FOMC ended seven years of zero rate monetary policy on December 16 with a 25 bp hike

  • Markets project less than a 35 percent probability of a follow up Fed hike in 2016

  • Tempered rate forecasts can hurt the Dollar and potentially forestall an equity market tumble

See the DailyFX Analysts' 1Q forecasts for the Dollar, Euro, Pound, Equities and Gold as well as our favorite 2016 trading opportunities in the DailyFX Trading Guides page.

Fed Chair Janet Yellen testified on monetary policy in her semi-annual (Humphrey-Hawkins) update before a clearly dissatisfied House. A range of topics was covered for the event, but traders were specifically honing in on all the remarks for clues as to how the central bank plans to navigate policy over the coming months. Given the market’s floundering, it was clear that there was no clear consensus on how Yellen’s responses to Congressional questions sets the stage for a more dovish or hawkish path. This is an uncomfortable ambiguity to maintain.

There are many implications born from monetary policy beyond the expected increase or decrease in market based rates. The redistribution of capital through changing speculative views is particularly dramatic now with the US the only major policy group pursuing active tightening while its counterparts are either neutral or proactive with stimulus efforts. These tides can carry different consequences for key market benchmarks. In particular, the Dollar and US equities – which have maintained a positive correlation over the past months – stands to see dramatically divergent responses to next steps from the Fed.

Market Expectations

Before considering the impact that monetary policy can have on the currency and shares, it is important to appreciate how the market’s expectations have developed. Expectations of a return to rate hikes (a ‘hawkish’ regime) have gained considerable traction over the past few years as general FOMC targets for employment were reached and expectations for inflation lifted. That said, outright hawkishness took an abrupt turn around the first quarter of last year.

Fed Outlook Puts US Dollar and Equities In Troubling Position
Fed Outlook Puts US Dollar and Equities In Troubling Position

In the chart above, we find the difference between the market’s and FOMC’s expectations for monetary policy pace. This is specifically the forecast for the benchmark rate through the end of (December) 2016. Both central bank body and average speculator have lowered their forecasts over the past two years; but it is worth nothing that the market has consistently discounted the central bank’s views.

Fed Outlook Puts US Dollar and Equities In Troubling Position
Fed Outlook Puts US Dollar and Equities In Troubling Position

Focusing on the market specifically, the chart above looks at 2-Year Treasury Yields and the implied rate forecast for 12 months forward derived from overnight swaps. Both have fallen dramatically since the first rate hike was secured back on December 16. Despite the FOMC’s official forecast – last updated in the December update – calling for 100 basis points (bp) of hikes through this year, market participants are heavily debating even one standard, 25 bp hike through February of next year. That is a wide contrast.