As Lael Brainard piled on The Fed's sudden utter hawkishness, following Dudley, Harker, Kaplan, and Williams, we noticed a common thread behind the need to hike rates in March - each implicitly or explicitly noted America's "surprisingly strong economy." This led to a stunning WTF moment...
What's wrong with this chart?
To explain in simple terms - the collapse in Fed Funds Futures signals an increasing probability of a rate-hike very soon, driven by all the jawboning, who could blame the market? But why is The Fed screaming about how great the economy is how an imminent rate hike is needed when The Fed's own economic growth forecast is collapsing? The correlation in the chart above is 100% opposite of what one would expect - more dismal economic expectations, higher probability of a rate hike?
MishTalk.com's Mike Shedlock is as surprised as us and dives into the details...
Curve Watchers Anonymous is taking a hard look at the yield curve in light of the now odds-on market view of a March rate hike.
Before looking at the chart below, where do you think rates are relative to January 2014? Up, down, or sideways?
Yield Curve Since 1998
The chart shows monthly closing values except for the current month.
Change Since January 2014
The 2-30 spread flattened by a whopping 181 basis points in just over two years.
The 2-10 spread flattened by 149 basis points.
A flattening of the yield curve is not good for bank profits. Rising 10-year yields since mid-2016 are not good for mortgages or housing affordability.
Not to worry, despite poor economic reports, Fed governors have stated: “This is a surprisingly strong economy.”
Surprisingly Strong Economy Links
- March Rate Hike Odds Surge to 80 Percent: New Standard for “Surprisingly Strong” Economy
- Inflation-Adjusted Spending Declines Most Since September 2009: Stagflation Coming?
- Construction Spending Unexpectedly Declines One Percent
- New Home Sales Rise Half of Economists’ Expectations, Supply Surges
- 4th Quarter GDP Unexpectedly Undershoots Consensus: What’s Ahead?
- Trade Deficit Unexpectedly Widens: Exports Sink, Imports Up Sharply
- GDPNow 1st Quarter Forecast Plunges to 1.8% Following Personal Income and Outlays Report
Somewhere in that set of links, there is hidden “surprising strength”. I leave it to the reader to find the surprises and report back.
