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Why the Fed wants to see a strong dollar and falling stock prices: Morning Brief

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Thursday, September 8, 2022

Today's newsletter is by Jared Blikre, a reporter focused on the markets on Yahoo Finance. Follow him on Twitter @SPYJared.

The Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) notched a 2.1% gain Wednesday, ending a seven-day losing stretch that had been frustrating the buy-the-dip crowd once again.

Problem is, surging stocks are the last thing the Federal Reserve wants to see.

Sudden reversals of fortune — both to the upside and downside — are common in illiquid bear markets.

But Wednesday's rally flies in the face of a Federal Reserve doubling (or tripling) down on its steely resolve to curb runaway price inflation.

On Wednesday before the opening bell, a report from the Wall Street Journal's top Fed whisperer Nick Timiraos caught investors' attention, with the report suggesting another 75 basis point rate hike will be coming from the central bank later this month.

This move would mark a continuation of the Fed's summer gambit to confront inflation by tamping down anything that stands in that fight's way. Which in this case means tightening financial conditions.

The simple outline of tighter financial conditions is a stronger U.S. dollar, wider spreads across bond markets, and lower stock prices. Trigger-happy equity bulls should read that sentence again, as they remain, de facto, fighting the Fed.

All else equal, tighter financial conditions require investors and consumers to be more deliberate about where and how they spend and borrow.

In late August, when Fed Chair Jay Powell delivered a blunt speech in Jackson Hole, telling investors the Fed will raise rates "until the job is done" bringing inflation down, markets sold-off. Message received. Financial conditions tighter.

Minneapolis Fed president Neel Kashkari made waves last week when he acknowledged preferring this market reaction to what was seen after the Fed's July FOMC meeting. Which was a market rally that saw the S&P 500 gain 2.6% and the Nasdaq rise more than 4%.

“I certainly was not excited to see the stock market rallying after our last Federal Open Market Committee meeting," Kashkari told Bloomberg in an interview.

And while the Fed does have a third "shadow mandate" of financial stability — its formal goals are stable prices, or 2% inflation, and maximum employment — there has not yet been an S&P 500 target added to the Federal Reserve's Congressional mandate.

Still, these tighter financial conditions Fed officials are angling towards do carry some potentially significant positive impacts in the Fed's inflation fight. A stronger dollar increases purchasing power for U.S. consumers, brings down global commodity prices, and in turn helps ease input prices. All of which is disinflationary, just what the Fed would like.