International Forecaster Weekly

Powell

Hi all, this letter might be a bit shorter than usual. Our office girl came down sick Sunday night, and now my wife’s a bit under the weather. I’m playing nursemaid.  Anyway…

Last week, the day ahead of Thanksgiving, the minutes from the last fed meeting were released. Now let me set the stage for you all. On Wall Street, when a big holiday is on deck, the senior management usually gets a one or two day jump on things.

They get their Hamptons beach house all ready for guests and frolicking with much food and drink. And yeah, some coke might be found too. The point being that on the day before the true holiday, if the market is open, it’s not being manned by all the heavy hitters. No, they’re in their cozy beach homes, and keeping in touch via internet and phone with the juniors they’ve left to man the stations.

But usually the word given is “don’t rock the boat.” In other words, the major players don’t want the second string guys to do anything stupid and lose them money.  So what usually happens is this…say the market has been trending slightly higher into that holiday. Well, those junior players will figure “hey, the market was inching higher when the bosses were here, we’ll just keep the motion going.”

This became pretty evident to me when those minutes hit. Yes there was talk in them about possibly slowing the “size” of the upcoming rate hikes. Wall Street apparently loves that idea. Why? Well they figure that if they’re no longer needing to stomp on the brake pedal with 75 basis point hikes, then surely that means they’re getting much closer to their target rate and soon they’ll do their pause and stop hiking.

So the report hit and the market which had slumped a bit perked up and ended the day nice and green. Even on Friday with the shortened market session, they eeked out some more gains.

But I didn’t read those minutes like they did. What came blaringly important to me was that most of them agreed that while they might chop down on the size of the hikes, the ultimate rate they think they want is HIGHER than they had previously considered.  That to me was a major warning sign. 

Let’s face it, there’s a decades old adage that says don’t fight the fed. I get it. When they’re cutting rates, you go with the flow and buy equities. When they’re hiking, you tend to sell down some. But here’s where I think they’ve misread the fed. What difference does it make how big each rate hike is, if your end goal is higher than you originally stated?  For instance 2 75 basis point hikes is 1.5%, right? Well isn’t 3 50 basis point hikes the same? It is.

Bob Rinear | November 30, 2022

Hi all, this letter might be a bit shorter than usual. Our office girl came down sick Sunday night, and now my wife’s a bit under the weather. I’m playing nursemaid.  Anyway…

Last week, the day ahead of Thanksgiving, the minutes from the last fed meeting were released. Now let me set the stage for you all. On Wall Street, when a big holiday is on deck, the senior management usually gets a one or two day jump on things.

They get their Hamptons beach house all ready for guests and frolicking with much food and drink. And yeah, some coke might be found too. The point being that on the day before the true holiday, if the market is open, it’s not being manned by all the heavy hitters. No, they’re in their cozy beach homes, and keeping in touch via internet and phone with the juniors they’ve left to man the stations.

But usually the word given is “don’t rock the boat.” In other words, the major players don’t want the second string guys to do anything stupid and lose them money.  So what usually happens is this…say the market has been trending slightly higher into that holiday. Well, those junior players will figure “hey, the market was inching higher when the bosses were here, we’ll just keep the motion going.”

This became pretty evident to me when those minutes hit. Yes there was talk in them about possibly slowing the “size” of the upcoming rate hikes. Wall Street apparently loves that idea. Why? Well they figure that if they’re no longer needing to stomp on the brake pedal with 75 basis point hikes, then surely that means they’re getting much closer to their target rate and soon they’ll do their pause and stop hiking.

So the report hit and the market which had slumped a bit perked up and ended the day nice and green. Even on Friday with the shortened market session, they eeked out some more gains.

But I didn’t read those minutes like they did. What came blaringly important to me was that most of them agreed that while they might chop down on the size of the hikes, the ultimate rate they think they want is HIGHER than they had previously considered.  That to me was a major warning sign. 

Let’s face it, there’s a decades old adage that says don’t fight the fed. I get it. When they’re cutting rates, you go with the flow and buy equities. When they’re hiking, you tend to sell down some. But here’s where I think they’ve misread the fed. What difference does it make how big each rate hike is, if your end goal is higher than you originally stated?  For instance 2 75 basis point hikes is 1.5%, right? Well isn’t 3 50 basis point hikes the same? It is.

But worse, they originally stated that terminal rates might be 4.5 – 4.75. Now the thinking is 5 – 5.5.  So I tend to think that the Street sort of missed the point here.

Then Monday rolls around and they have fed heads out yakking all over the place that rates need to go substantially higher and pauses and what have you are not even a topic of discussion.  That knocked the DOW off 500 points.  Even Tuesday, they couldn’t seem to do much more than run in place. Why? Because on Wednesday, Fed head Powell was to be giving a speech and all of a sudden they got worried that maybe he’s going to be more hawkish than anticipated. Ya think? Well that was my feeling last week.

Wall Street is convinced that inflation has peaked, and the Fed can end things right here. But if you look at the things Powell has told us that are important measures to him, they have NOT come down to where he’s going to want to stop hikes. The last thing this guy wants to get blamed for is pausing hikes, seeing inflation perk up more and then have to go hike rates again. He’d get roasted.

So my feeling was/is that Powell’s going to be a lot more staunch and hawkish than many think. He might even float out the idea that 75 isn’t off the table, despite trotting out “nick the whisperer” a few weeks back. I’m not saying I thought he was going to do 75, I’m saying there was an adjustment to the last CPI that won’t be included in this one. That adjustment lowered the CPI last month, it won’t this time.

If Powell was to come out and be a big hawk, the market will pout over it, no  doubt. But then again I think to myself, if I am reading this wrong and he comes out lame and soft and squishy, this market will rock higher.

So the question of the day that I needed answered was “is Bob right and he comes out rough and tumble and the market fades, or is Bob wrong and he says soft dovish things and the market runs on it? 

We’ll know tomorrow. Stay tuned.