And of course, take that, and the opinions below with a few grains of salt.
From Bloomberg via ZeroHedge:
"It Won't Be Suffient": Wall Street Reacts To Powell's Final "Insurance Cut"
The Fed's widely anticipated, 3rd and final "insurance" rate cut is now in the history books, and with it comes the question is the Fed's "mid-cycle adjustment" done, or is the easing only set to accelerate heading into 2020/2021 recession. The problem, of course, is that as a reminder, in the past 30 years, the Fed has never cut more than three times without the economy contracting thereafter.....MORE
So will "3 cuts and done" be enough? As Rabobank's Philip Marey notes, "we still expect a US recession in 2020 that will force the Fed to cut rates all the way to zero before the end of next year." And, as Bloomberg economist Andrew Husby notes, the market seems to agree: "as the 2-year yield reprices higher and the 10-year holds steady, flattening the curve, markets aren’t convinced the 75 bps of easing will be a sufficient mid-cycle adjustment."
Below is a handful of kneejerk responses from Wall Street strategists laying out their views on today's "hawkish cut"
Jon Hill, interest rate strategist at BMO Capital Markets
Andrew Husby, economist at Bloomberg:
- "The Fed cut rates 25 bp and removed ‘act as appropriate’ from the policy statement. This isn’t to say that the Committee won’t cut if needed in December, but this is a clear signal that the bias is not as skewed toward additional easing as it has been in recent months", said Hill summarizing the consensus "hawkish cut" take.
- "The general characterization of the economy was nearly unchanged; look for Powell to exert a more patient bias as the lagged impact of the mid-cycle adjustment works its way through financial conditions and economic activity."
Win Thin, head of FX strategy at Brown Brothers Harriman:
- "In removing “will act as appropriate” the statement shows members are attempting to move away from an active stance, putting more emphasis on monitoring."
- However, as Husby notes, "as the 2-year yield reprices higher and the 10-year holds steady, flattening the curve, markets aren’t convinced the 75 bps of easing will be a sufficient mid-cycle adjustment."
Ira Jersey, interest rate strategist at Bloomberg Intelligence:
- The "subtle Shift" in the Fed’s language reduces December rate cut odds; the Federal Reserve’s omission of its pledge to “act as appropriate” reduces the odds that the central bank will cut again this year.
- "I think the Fed is saying it will wait for new information before cutting again,” Win says in an emailed note. "I don’t see another cut in December unless the data really fall off a cliff." That will be "dollar-positive."
- "Although the Fed’s statement was basically in line with our expectations, the market appears to be taking the news a modestly less dovish than expectations. The same two dissenters should not be a surprise."
- "We don’t expect any major rate market response from this, but as has been typical of late, the press conference may be more market moving."...
Going forward, keep an eye on Fed liquidity operations, repo etc.