Broad Expectations – Of 94 economists polled by Bloomberg, eight have a 75bp (or 0.75%) hike as their call and 86 are calling for a 50bp hike. The market places a 97% chance of a 75bp hike.
Managing the risk
It’s the meeting everyone has on their radar – implied volatility in equity and FX is elevated and rising, and the market will be hanging off every word Fed chair Jerome Powell has to say - it's a genuine risk event for traders to consider.
Traders must consider their exposures over this meeting and while position sizing is always of paramount importance, now, more than ever traders need to be in front of their screens. When we see a potential volatility shock, this is risk management 101, traders who get this right survive and potentially thrive.
The Fed previous guided the market to a 50bp hike but since its blackout period (which restricted its communication) we’ve had a huge 8.6% inflation print and both bonds and equities have been smashed – the USD is trading at 20-year highs, with big moves vs high beta FX – NOK, AUD and NZD and GBPUSD shorts are homing in on 1.2000. The market knows the Fed is violently engineering a negative wealth effect, which will impact demand and that means the ‘Fed put’ is no longer in play.
Traders question whether the Fed show any concerns about market drawdown and the tighter financial conditions, or in fact, welcomes it – risk assets could take their cues from this vibe.
As the WSJ noted, the new US CPI print allows the Fed to break away from its prior guidance (for 50bp) and the interest rate markets have completely bought into the idea that we’ll see a 75bp hike – this is fully priced into markets. We can also see a 67bp hike priced for the July meeting. This takes the fed funds rate into the so-called ‘neutral rate’ (the level of the fed funds that is estimated to be neither accommodative nor restrictive) – this is the level the fed funds really need to be and quickly.