Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s relative hawkishness, in a series of comments made in Europe over the past 24 hours, has shunted money market rates higher – with futures now starting to price a one-in-five chance of a second quarter-point rate rise by year-end. Hopes for any rate cut in 2023 are all but gone.
“I wouldn’t take…moving at consecutive meetings off the table at all,” he said, noting “the committee clearly believes that there’s more work to do, that there are more rate hikes that are likely to be appropriate”.
With the big U.S. banks passing their latest series of stress tests overnight – despite big paper bond hits over the past year and regional bank ructions in the Spring – Powell said on Thursday the Fed was ‘very reluctant’ to sound the all clear for banks just yet and further rate rises from here would be at a ‘moderate’ pace.
Two-year Treasury yields crept higher to 4.77% on Thursday after all the news, with the dollar firmer too and S&P500 futures marginally positive – helped by Micron. The VIX volatility gauge remains subdued at 13.6.
Powell’s relative hawkishness was mostly matched by counterparts at the European Central Bank and Bank of England yesterday. Sweden’s Riksbank was the latest to push ahead with a rate hike on Thursday, and German inflation readouts for June pointed to a worrying re-acceleration of price rises there.
But Western central banks’ doubling down on rate rise plans stands in stark contrast to super-easy stances in Japan and China – with commensurate pressure building on the yen and the yuan against a resurgent dollar as a result, despite local efforts to frustrate dollar moves to 2023 highs this week.
Dollar/yen hit another 7-month high on Thursday.
Elsewhere, fashion retailer H&M jumped 11% to a 16-month high after its second-quarter profit beat forecasts.
And food companies will closely eye news that one of the most common artificial sweeteners is set to be declared a possible carcinogen next month by a leading global health body.