Jackson Hole Preview: Fed will try not to ‘trigger carnage’

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This year’s central banking meeting in Jackson Hole, Wyoming appears to have tenser undertones than in previous years. Mounting worries over a U.S. recession and continued pressures from the White House are weighing on a Federal Reserve also trying to defend the U.S. economy from spillover effects of a slowdown in Europe and China.

With financial conditions and global concerns darkening the otherwise tranquil backdrop of the Grand Tetons, market participants will be gleaning Fed commentary in Wyoming for clues about what policymakers may be thinking for next steps. The worry: elevated risks of a communications mistake as a result of market sensitivity and inconsistent Fedspeak in recent months.

After a few weeks of limited public appearances, policymakers are slated to make public remarks at the Jackson Lake Lodge beginning Thursday. Market participants are specifically marking their calendars for Fed Chairman Jerome Powell’s speech on Friday at 10 a.m. ET, his first public remarks since cutting interest rates for the first time in over a decade.

Since that decision on July 31, a lot has happened. Earlier in the month, President Donald Trump threatened a new round of tariffs in the ongoing trade war with China. Last week, a critical part of the U.S. yield curve inverted as the yield on the 2-year U.S. Treasury blipped above the yield on the 10-year, traditionally a bellwether of a recession within eight to 24 months. The curve has since uninverted.

Capital Economics warned August 16 that commentary in Jackson Hole could “trigger carnage” in the bond and equity markets if they do not signal the additional rate cuts that markets are expecting given recent developments. At a bare minimum, the Fed may be hoping it can just avoid a major communications blunder.

“Frankly, it’s hard to know exactly what message Powell and other officials will deliver next week because Fed communication has become woefully bad,” Capital Economics’s Paul Ashworth said.

‘Challenges for monetary policy’

This year’s conference theme is, appropriately, “challenges for monetary policy.

Markets would like Powell to address the short-term challenge of whether or not the Fed needs to counteract the possibly adverse effects of the trade war and global risks with another rate cut.

But the bigger conundrum may be wrangling with the market itself.

Based on federal funds futures contracts, markets expect a total of two or three rate cuts by the end of the year, thus projecting more easing that the Fed’s own forecast. In the Fed’s last round of “dot plot” projections released June 19, policymakers telegraphed only up to two 25-basis-point cuts by the end of the year. One of those cuts came in the July 31 Federal Open Market Committee meeting.