Dots, dots, dots, that will be the story for
the bond market in the coming quarters. What are the dots, may I have your dot
please will be asked to every FED governor. Reading the FED tea leaves will be
dottology.
The FED has a problem with its forward
guidance. It has to become less quantitative because the unemloyment rate will
fall below 6.5% at a moment there is still considerable slack in the economy,
the participation rate too low and inflation, especially PCE.
Still the market wants hard numbers. The only
hard numbers left after a change to a qualitative guidance why interest rates
must remain below what the Taylor rule is saying for a considerable period are
the dots of the individual forecasts of the FED governors for the FED rates in
the future.
At the moment the market prices the forward
rates about what the dots are saying, even a bit lower. That is based on the
expectation that the dot of Janet Yellen is more dovish than the average and
that she will get her dot more important with the help of Stanley Fischer.
Because of the soft patch the dots of FED
went further out in the future for the first hike. The governors were more
afraid again that their growth expectations were too high.
Now economic growth is returning the reverse
should happen. The first hike will come more nearby in the coming year.
Hilsenrath (http://blogs.wsj.com/economics/2014/03/17/grand-central-the-persistence-of-persistent-headwinds-in-the-economy/)
indicated that the forward guidance will be defended like Bernanke did: he was
saying in September that the economic growth faced more headwinds than normal
and so monetary policy has to be much more easy than the Taylor rule will
indicate. The FED will probably copy what Carney will say about forward
guidance.
[Mark Carney,
governor of the Bank of England, said in a press conference last month that
“persistent headwinds mean that, even in the medium term, the level of interest
rates necessary to sustain low unemployment and price stability will be
materially lower than before the crisis.” Ben Bernanke, the former Federal
Reserve chairman, said in a press conference last September, “we expect that a
number of factors—including the slow recovery of the housing sector, continued
fiscal drag, perhaps continued effects from the financial crisis—may still
prove to be headwinds to the recovery.” Here’s why this matters so much. The
central banks are projecting an economy that looks on its face like it is
returning to normal in the next couple of years. The Fed, for instance,
projects that by the end of 2016 the unemployment rate will be near long-run
average between 5.2% and 5.8% and inflation will be near the Fed’s long-run
target of 2%. Yet most Fed officials are projecting the target for short-term
interest rates will be below 2%, much less than the 4% level that officials
think is appropriate in normal times.]
So for the short run the headwinds story of
forward guidance will be believed, but already now monetarists are writing that
you have to watch inflation and credit growth and not use the headwinds story.
The hawks will become louder, QE has to go and the FED must be not too obvious
behind the curve.
N.B. Yellen indicated like Bernanke that the
dots are not important, just believe the FED statement. The buck stops with me.
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