FED WATCH: Bond Mkts Price In Easing, Defying Fed Stance
06 Mar 14:55
By Michael S. Derby Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Bond markets are pricing in a Federal Reserve interest rate cut most economists maintain won't happen. That's leading many to wonder what side will have to give first.
Markets may realize they've gone to far in their pessimism and have to sell off to get yields more in line with the real course of monetary policy, or Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan may have to start preparing the ground for yet another easing of interest rates sometime this spring.
So far, economists and bond strategists agree the market is more likely to have gotten it wrong, although they add that the mispricing has been done for understandable reasons.
Eurodollar futures contracts and fed funds futures are progressively pricing in greater odds of a Fed rate cut at the late June policy meeting. The fed funds contracts see a modest 20% chance of a rate cut at the upcoming March 18 meeting, but reflect a 70% chance of an easing by June 25.
Meanwhile, the Treasury market's prime short-term interest rate measure - the two-year note's yield - continues to carve out historic low after historic low.
While the issue was under some modest pressure Thursday, its yield stood at 1.44%. That's one of the closest spreads to the Fed's overnight fed funds target rate of 1.25% in several months.
Nasty Numbers "The market clearly has been looking at the economic data" and believes that recent softening in manufacturing, rising unemployment insurance claims and other factors portend even more weakness down the road, said Gemma Wright, market strategist at Barclays Capital in New York. With that in mind, she said, many traders and investors believe the central bank will have to respond with more stimulus.
The number of U.S. workers filing first-time applications for unemployment benefits climbed to a two-month-and-a-half month highlast week.
But so far, nothing out of the Fed suggests that it will be cutting interest rates any time soon.
For one, with interest rates so low, financial markets are effectively providing an additional leg of stimulus to the economy that the Fed would in any case welcome. There's also no evidence the Fed believes any additional rate cut is necessary.
Since late last year, central bank officials have both in public comments and in the policy statements that have followed gatherings of the Federal Open Market Committee, tied soft economic performance to uncertainty over the looming war in Iraq. They expect a resolution of that conflict to allow the nation's solid economic fundamentals to take charge and power a much stronger and enduring recovery.
Indeed, in testimony before congress in early February, Greenspan flagged the sway of uncertainty over the economy, telling legislators he doubted that the economy needed any more help from additional tax cuts targeted at spurring short-term economic growth.
Fed governor Ben Bernanke said in a speech late last month that "although areas of financial weakness are certainly present in the economy, as in every recession, the financial problems that currently exist do not seem sufficient to prevent an increasingly robust economic recovery during this year and next." U.S. monetary policy makers' consistent stance underscores their growing divergence from much more pessimistic financial markets.
"There is some disconnect" between markets and the Fed, and it has a lot to do with the numbers that the two camps are looking at, said Stephen Stanley, senior market economist at RBS Greenwich in Greenwich, Conn.
He reckons the markets are paying too much attention to issues like falling consumer confidence and the claims data. Markets may also be losing sight of the extent to which real economic performance is being obscured by war worries, he said.
The Price of Fear Some strategists argue thatjust as economic performance is being distorted by war prospects, so too have market price levels. The rally in two-year notes and its relationship to monetary policy has been subsumed by a mad dash by investors toward risk-free investments.
Gerald Lucas, senior government bond strategist with Merrill Lynch in New York, said a notable slice of the bond market pricing levels are simply insurance against a more messy outcome to the war. The Fed funds contract, for example, "reflects a downside geopolitical risk" that builds on some real expectations of Fed easing, Lucas explained.
Most strategist believe that if the war comes relatively soon and passes with minimal surprises, it's likely that fixed-income prices will fall to reflect the diminished safe harbor concerns first and foremost, and also the reduced odds of more rate cutting.
But if the economic data don't improve, it may well have to be the Fed that changes its tune.
"I think (the Fed has) got to begin to start worrying here," said Chris Rupkey, economist at the Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi in New York. "They didn't expect the economy to lift until we got past the Iraq crises," but "I don't think they realized they'd be faced with such a darkening storm in the data." Rupkey says that it's a good chance the Fed could over coming months recognize the deterioration not so much with an easing, but by changing its balance of risks statement to say economic risks lie on the downside.
-Michael S. Derby, Dow Jones Newswires; 201-938-4192; michael.derby@dowjones.com (END) Dow Jones Newswires 03-06-03 1455ET |