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THE DAILY EDGE: 20 October 2023

Note: I am travelling this month. Posting will be sporadic and shorter due to limited time and equipment.

HEARSAY!

Same meeting, same words, … but different accounts…

From the WSJ’s Nick Timiraos:

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell suggested that he is pleased with inflation’s decline this summer and that the central bank is unlikely to raise interest rates again unless it sees clear evidence that stronger economic activity jeopardizes such progress.

“Given the uncertainties and risks, and how far we have come, the committee is proceeding carefully,” Powell said in prepared remarks for a Thursday lunchtime address in New York. “Incoming data over recent months show ongoing progress toward both” of the Fed’s goals to maintain stable inflation and strong employment.

Powell’s remarks closely tracked those of his colleagues in recent days who have suggested they are prepared to hold short-term interest rates steady at their next meeting on Oct. 31-Nov. 1. That is in part because a run-up in long-term interest rates over the past month could slow the economy, effectively substituting for rate rises if higher borrowing costs are sustained.

“We remain attentive to these developments because persistent changes in financial conditions can have implications for the path of monetary policy,” Powell said.

Coming decisions over whether to raise rates again and how long to hold them near current levels would depend “on the totality of the incoming data, the evolving outlook, and the balance of risks,” he said.

Firmer-than-expected economic activity has made it difficult for the Fed to declare an end to rate rises, and Powell stopped short of doing so Thursday.

A blowout September employment report from the Labor Department earlier this month and a strong retail-sales report from the Commerce Department on Tuesday have extended a run of surprisingly brisk data releases. (…)

Still, Powell didn’t suggest that such economic strength was yet generating the heat—in the form of higher inflation—that would justify raising rates further.

As he did in a speech this August, Powell twice used the word “could” instead of the more muscular “would” to describe whether the Fed would tighten again. Evidence of stronger growth “could put further progress at risk and could warrant further tightening of monetary policy,” he said. (…)

The Fed estimates that overall prices in September rose 3.5% from a year earlier—unchanged from August and down from a peak of 7.1% in June 2022—using its preferred inflation gauge, Powell said. Core prices, which exclude volatile food and energy items, likely rose 3.7% in September, down from 3.9% in August and a peak of 5.6% in February 2022, he added. (…)

Powell described the slowdown in inflation since June as a “very favorable development” while acknowledging that data for September were “somewhat less encouraging.”

The question going forward is whether strong consumer spending will continue to buoy hiring, boosting demand and stalling progress bringing down price growth. (…)

Notably, Powell suggested that wage growth, which had been a top concern of his and other officials over the past year, now appeared to be slowing toward levels that would be consistent with the Fed’s 2% target. Earlier this year, Powell described the labor market as overheated, risking a dangerous dynamic in which paychecks and prices rise in lockstep, fueling inflation. (…)

From Axios’ Neil Irwin:

“We are attentive to recent data showing the resilience of economic growth and demand for labor,” Powell said at the Economic Club of New York.

“Additional evidence of persistently above-trend growth, or that tightness in the labor market is no longer easing, could put further progress on inflation at risk and could warrant further tightening of monetary policy.”

Powell also acknowledged that the runup in long-term interest rates in recent weeks — the 10 year Treasury as of late morning was inching close to 5%, a 16-year high — adds risk in the other direction.

“Financial conditions have tightened significantly in recent months, and longer-term bond yields have been an important driving factor in this tightening,” Powell said, adding that the Fed will “remain attentive to these developments.”

Powell repeats language that the Fed is “proceeding carefully” in its policy moves, which is a signal that there will be no additional rate hike in a meeting two weeks from now.

However, another interest rate increase in December looks to be very much in play in light of Powell’s comments about the risks turbo-charged growth will undermine the Fed’s inflation fight.

Goldman Sachs:

  • Powell Stresses Progress on Inflation and Labor Market, Notes FOMC Is “Proceeding Carefully” in Light of Two-Sided Risks

In prepared remarks at an event at the Economic Club of New York today, Chair Powell emphasized that recent data “show ongoing progress” toward the Fed’s dual mandate goals of maximum employment and price stability and stressed that the FOMC “is proceeding carefully” in light of “uncertainties and risks, and how far we have come” in the tightening cycle.

Chair Powell highlighted that “declining inflation has not come at the cost of meaningfully higher unemployment,” a development he characterized as “welcome … but historically unusual.”

Chair Powell also noted that “a period of below-trend growth and some further softening in labor market conditions” would likely be required to return inflation to the FOMC’s 2% target.

As a result, Chair Powell stressed that “additional evidence of persistently above-trend growth, or that tightness in the labor market is no longer easing, could … warrant further tightening of monetary policy.”

In the Q&A session following the speech, Chair Powell noted that higher long-term bond yields could reduce the need for further tightening “at the margin,” though he emphasized that it “remains to be seen” whether higher yields would actually substitute for additional hikes.

I emphasized “at the margin” because only GS quoted these rather important words from Mr. Powell when characterizing the potential effect LT yields might have on the economy and monetary policy.

Bloomberg’s John Authers also has his own account of the event:

He’s leaving the possibility of another hike open in case of further signs of resilient economic growth, but as it stands it looks very likely that Powell and his colleagues will skip hiking rates for two consecutive meetings, for the first time in their 19-month tightening campaign. (…)

But he did very directly admit that the Fed and the bond markets are now in a state of interdependence, and put a perhaps dangerous amount of faith in bond traders to do the Fed’s work.

The key words to latch on to were that “persistent changes in financial conditions” — as has just been witnessed by the surge in longer bond yields — “can have implications for the path of monetary policy.” In other words, higher yields make it easier for the Fed to avoid making further hikes in overnight rates. (…)

All of this was taken as a broad hint that the Fed wouldn’t need to hike rates again, because the bond market was doing the work. (…)

Authers then discussed how readings of apparently tightening financial conditions can also differ considerably.

This is the Bloomberg FC index, very tight:

But…

Stephen Stanley of Santander described the Fed as “being willfully dovish at the moment,” and predicted that another hike would be needed by the end of the year. He added, in a note:

I’m puzzled by the sudden FOMC fascination with 10-year Treasury yields as the be-all, end-all indication of the economic outlook. For years, Chairman Powell has insisted that the Fed looks at financial conditions broadly rather than at a particular single measure.

Well, I am sure that it will snug in the coming weeks, but the Chicago Fed Financial Conditions Index, which is just what the Fed says that it likes (a broad index that includes both market measures and other indicators, such as from the Fed’s Senior Loan Officer survey) was, as of the end of last week, at its easiest reading since the FOMC began to raise rates. Yes, you read that right.

Powell, during the question-and-answer session with Westin, added: “I think the evidence is not that policy is too tight right now.”

(…) he said that policymakers would let the rise in yields “play out” and watch what happened.

Some evidence:

The U.S. Services PMI declined to the 50 no growth range.

September data indicated a continued decline in new business at service sector firms. The rate of contraction quickened to the sharpest since December 2022, albeit still modest overall. Lower new orders were reportedly linked to weak domestic and foreign client demand, with new export orders falling for the first time in five months. The decrease in new export sales was the steepest since February and was in stark contrast to the solid expansion seen in July.

Although slower than the series average, service providers saw a further rise in employment during September. Staffing numbers have risen in each month since July 2020, with the latest uptick the fastest for three months. Alongside efforts to clear backlogs, firms noted that greater workforce numbers on the month were often due to the replacement of previous voluntary leavers.

On the prices front, input costs rose at a further marked pace, with the rate of inflation similar to that seen in August. Panellists stated that higher energy, fuel, wage and food costs drove the latest increase in business expenses. The pace of cost inflation remained above the long-run series average.

In line with another substantial uptick in cost burdens, service providers hiked their selling prices in September. The pace of charge inflation accelerated to the fastest since July as firms sought to pass through greater costs to customers.

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Among the G4, services inflation remains a problem but gradually less so:

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“…by far the greatest upward pressure on selling prices for both goods and services continued to be coming from wages in August…”

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In the USA, price pressures picked up as a result of growth in wages and higher costs for fuel and raw materials. That said, output charge inflation slowed amid efforts to boost sales.

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The number of companies raising their selling prices due to stronger demand was the lowest since November 2020, signalling that a sales slowdown is helping to ease global inflationary pressures.

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In the last 2 months U.S. wage growth came in at 0.2% MoM, 2.5% a.r., across the board, including services, bringing the YoY changes to the 4% range.

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But the composition-adjusted Atlanta Fed wage tracker is still above 5%.

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Housing is where conditions are the tightest:

Home Sales Fall to Lowest Rate in 13 Years Home sales fell 2% in September to the lowest rate since October 2010, the National Association of Realtors said, as high mortgage rates squeeze the market.

Existing home sales, which make up most of the housing market, decreased 2% in September from the prior month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 3.96 million, the lowest rate since October 2010, the National Association of Realtors said Thursday. September sales fell 15.4% from a year earlier.

The national median existing-home price rose 2.8% in September from a year earlier to $394,300, NAR said. That was the highest price for any September in data going back to 1999, said Lawrence Yun, NAR’s chief economist. (…)

Nationally, there were 1.13 million homes for sale or under contract at the end of September, up 2.7% from August and down 8.1% from September 2022, NAR said. That was the lowest inventory level for any September in data going back to 1999, Yun said. At the current sales pace, there was a 3.4-month supply of homes on the market at the end of September. (…)

The share of first-time buyers in the market was 27% in September, down from 29% a year earlier. About 29% of September existing-home sales were purchased in cash, up from 22% in the same month a year ago, NAR said.

A measure of U.S. home-builder confidence fell in October for the third straight month, the National Association of Home Builders said this week. (…)

But overall demand remains strong:

US Sales Managers Growth Indexes Rise to New Highs in October

The US Sales Managers Market Growth Index accelerated to a 54.9 reading in October, a 27 month high. The month-on-month Sales Growth Index also rose sharply to a similarly elevated level, and 8 month high. These indexes are currently reflecting buoyant growth over a wide spectrum of economic activity.

US Sales Managers Growth Indexes - Rise to New Highs in October