Here it comes: Are you ready for the Fed to taper?
     Text Size    Published: Friday, 13 Sep 2013 |  9:36  PM ET  														 									    							By:  Patti Domm											 | CNBC Executive News Editor		 	  	
 
 
     													 																																								  																														  															  																						  									Pete Marovich | Bloomberg | Getty Images 								 Ben Bernanke  													   The  Federal Reserve  is expected to announce its first move to taper its $85 billion in  monthly bond buying when its two-day meeting ends Wednesday. While the  Fed is seen curbing bond purchases by an initial $10 to $15 billion — a  relative baby step compared to the massive amount of stimulus applied —  it sends an important message that the Fed is moving toward a  normalization of rates and expecting a more normal economy. 
  "We  have come a long way, and we often forget how far we've come. At the  heart of the crisis, people didn't think there was a tomorrow. Now we  know, there's a tomorrow. We just don't know how strong it is," said  Diane Swonk, chief economist at Mesirow Financial. "Sometimes the cure  has its own dangers and you have to look at those tradeoffs. That's  where the Fed is. Is the cure good enough for the risks?"
  The  Fed's bond buying, which has ballooned its balance sheet to $3.6  trillion, has been criticized for adding too much easy money to the  economy and over-inflating the stock market. Just talk of a pullback in  the Fed's  quantitative easing  program prompted a swift move up in Treasury yields, and also mortgage  rates. Stocks reacted negatively at first to the higher rates, but the  pain across emerging markets was much more intense as capital took  flight. U.S. stocks have largely recovered, with the  S&P 500  now just about 1.2 percent from its all-time high.
   					  									 				 							   (Read more:  Dow logs its best week since January as traders brace for Fed) 
    Whither Markets?  
     Traders believe much of the market moves around this first step in  unwinding policy may have already taken place, but there is still  concern the actual news could bring a volatile reaction if it doesn't go  just right.  
    "Treasury yields probably went too high on QE  'tapering' talk and will come back down a little bit. I feel like  Treasury yields were going up one way or the other. I think stocks could  get over it," said Chris Rupkey, chief financial economist at Bank of  Tokyo-Mitsubishi.  
    "It's all in our minds. It's not  liquidity that's buying stocks. It's just a kind of a feel-good for  stocks … that the Fed's on the case and doing something. It should not  be fueling anything. It did do something originally when stocks were  weak and people were starting to look forward to the QE announcements,  but I don't think it's going to have the same impact when they pull it  away," said Rupkey.  
    The Fed launched the latest round of quantitative easing in response to worries about the " fiscal cliff,"  when tax increases and spending cuts were expected to kick in at the  end of 2012, and as Europe's sovereign debt crisis flared. While those  crises have passed, traders are watching talks in Congress on a budget  resolution and the debt ceiling as a new source of potential crisis  later this month or next.  
    While the Fed meeting in the week  ahead tops the list, Congressional budget maneuvering and any  developments on Syria will also get attention. The United Nations is  expected to receive a report Monday which should show if Syria used  chemical weapons on its citizens.   
    There is also the  outstanding question of who will run the Fed when Chairman Ben Bernanke  leaves at the end of the year. Besides Bernanke, three other Fed  officials have already signaled they are leaving and others could also  resign, including Vice Chair Janet Yellen, a candidate for chairman.   Fed watchers expect the question about Bernanke's replacement to take on  more urgency after the Fed meeting.  
    (Read more:  Will Syria keep Larry Summers out of the Fed?) 
     President Obama favors former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers, but he  is expected to face a difficult approval process in the Senate. Late  Friday, Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont. became the latest Democrat on the  Senate Banking Committee to  signal he would vote against Summers  if he is nominated, according to news wires. Democrats have a 12-10  majority on the committee, and four have now spoken against Summers. 
     "Could we be surprised by the Fed? Yes. But to the extent they map  this out, you could get a rally by finally having a sense of certainty.  What I'm worried about on the other side (of the meeting), is the  uncertainty of who is going to be at the table. It's not just the Fed  chairman we're talking about," said Swonk.  
    If the Fed news  triggers a move up in rates, or the Fed is not extremely dovish in its  comments, stocks could feel some pain. Some economists expect the Fed to  reduce Treasury purchases but continue to buy $40 billion in mortgage  securities, in an effort to tighten mortgage spreads. Others expect to  see mortgage purchases trimmed as well.  
    "The (stock) market  is trading as if Goldilocks is in charge, and the bears may be headed  home soon," said Art Cashin, director of floor operations at UBS.  "What's priced in is a taper and $10 billion. If it turns out to be  mortgages that are reduced, that's not priced in….That's a surprise. Any  more than $10 billion is a surprise and volatility can pop back up."  
    The  Dow  in the past week was up 3 percent, to 15,376, its second best week of  the year. The S&P 500 was up 2 percent at 1687, its best week since  July, and the  Nasdaq was up 1.7 percent at 3722, despite a 6-percent decline in  Apple.  The 10-year Treasury was yielding 2.89 percent late Friday, and traders  are watching whether it will hit the psychological 3-percent level in  the coming week.  
    Peter Boockvar, chief market analyst at  the Lindsay Group said the success of the Treasury's 10-year and 30-year  bond auctions this past week shows the bond market has priced in the  tapering, but he does not see the same in the stock market.  
    "I  think the stock market is still too nonchalant about this rise in  interest rate. We've already seen an immediate reaction to the rise in  rates. Everything's not better in the economy," said Boockvar. "I don't  agree with the stock market here. The key for next Wednesday is not the  $10 to $15 billion. It's how they circle around that with their  language. The only weapon the Fed has left in controlling rates is how  they jawbone short-term rates."  
    "They can only rely on  verbal, short-term rate jawboning. The market's forced them into that  situation. The bond market took control of the long end, and the Fed has  gone to plan 'B,'" he said.  
    Jawboning versus QE  
     Bernanke is expected to take extra care in communicating the Fed's  message Wednesday, keeping in mind it will be for his successor to  implement. Besides the Fed statement, the Fed will release new economic  and rate forecasts, and Bernanke will hold a media briefing.  
     Nathan Sheets, global head of international economics at Citigroup,  expects  a small taper of $10 to $15 billion, and he expects the Fed to  transition away from taking policy actions to pressing its forward  guidance.  
    "It will be accompanied by very dovish rhetoric and  communication by Bernanke. I think he will say we're slowing the pace of  securities purchases but he'll also make it clear it's not a one way  street so if the economy slows, they would have the possibility of  raising it," Sheets said.
   					  																																																								  								
 
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   	   									 Markets up even as Fed taper looms  																	 With the market up 3 percent  in September, Larry Kantor, Barclays, and David Darst, Morgan Stanley  Wealth Management, discuss what's moving the major indices.  														   Of big interest to the markets is what  the Fed projects in its rate guidance for 2016, which it will forecast  for the first time. It has indicated it expects to start raising the Fed  funds rate, the Fed's target rate for overnight lending between banks,  in 2015. Fed officials have repeatedly assured markets they do not  intend to move quicker to raise short-term rates, which affect a whole  range of consumer loans and things like credit card rates. 
    But  Bernanke has also said the QE purchases should be finished by the middle  of next year, and that at that time unemployment should be about 7  percent. The Fed has also indicated it has targeted an unemployment rate  of 6.5 percent for when it would begin to raise short-term rates. So if  the Fed expects employment to continue to normalize in 2016, a "normal"  level of interest rates – about 4 percent – would be much higher than  the market expects.  
    For that reason, economists expect the Fed to show just a modest hike in rates in 2016, trailing the economy's performance.  
     "They are, in a sense, being pressed to act at this meeting, and to  get tapering started because of some of these quantitative indicators  they put down," said Sheets. "They said they wanted to end (QE) at 7  percent. The unemployment rate is already 7.3 percent ... I  think what  they're going to debate is are these crisp indicators doing what we want  them to do or restraining policy. You might see him fuzzing them."  
     Sheets said the Fed could drop the unemployment-rate threshold from  6.5 percent, as some economists have been expecting. But Bernanke could  also talk around that, and highlight the Fed's guidance. "He can say all  we've done today is shift the use of tools we're using to provide  stimulus," Sheets said.  
    If the Fed does not taper at this  meeting, it is expected to do so soon, and few see the Fed holding back  from tapering this fall even though economic data have been spotty.  
     And even when the Fed does pare back bond purchases, it will still be  conducting a program to replace the mortgage securities on its balance  sheet as they mature, so there are further purchases of some $20 billion  a month. There is also no discussion yet of what might become of what  could be the Fed's biggest unconventional tool — its balance sheet.  
     Sheets said the taper is like the Fed taking its foot off an  accelerator. "It's not even looking at braking. They think it's the  stock of purchases (on the balance sheet) that's stimulating the  economy," he said, adding it's like holding the Fed funds rate at a very  low level. "I see these balance-sheet policy and quantitative easing  approaches in some ways being intensive care medicine. The policies he  put in place were when we were worried about very severe economic  outcomes, like the ones we were facing in 2008 and 2009. We now have an  economy that is disappointing but this is not an economy that's on the  precipice like it was four or five years ago." 
    What Else to Watch  
     Housing data tops the economic calendar for markets this week. There  is home-builder sentiment data Tuesday, housing starts Wednesday and  existing-home sales Thursday. Economists are watching to see if higher  rates have had an impact on the housing recovery.   
    Monday   
    0830 am Empire state survey  
    0915 am Industrial production 
    Tuesday  
    FOMC meeting begins  
    0830 am CPI  
    0900 am Treasury international capital flows data 
    1000 am National Association of Home Builders survey 
    Wednesday  
    0830 am Housing starts   
    0200 pm FOMC statement/economic forecasts 
    0230 pm Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke press briefing 
    Thursday  
    0830 am Initial jobless claims  
    0830 am Current account 
    1000 am Existing home sales 
    1000 am Philadelphia Fed survey 
    1000 am Leading indicators 
    1220 pm Cleveland Fed President Sandra Pianalto 
    Friday  
    1230 pm Kansas City Fed President Esther George  
    1255 pm St. Louis Fed President James Bullard 
    0145 pm Minneapolis Fed President Narayana Kocherlakota 
    —By CNBC's Patti Domm. Follow here on Twitter 
   @pattidomm.   					  						 |