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home / news releases / PLW - A Data-Dependent Fed And Future Monetary Policy


PLW - A Data-Dependent Fed And Future Monetary Policy

Summary

  • Fed officials are looking for evidence that this year’s rate increases and tightening of financial conditions will bring inflation back down to 2%.
  • The tight labor market has not shown any signs of cooling, with unemployment back to pre-pandemic levels and wage growth exceeding expectations.
  • For long-term bonds, the greater risk of economic contraction could increase demand and cause their yields to fall.

By Alex Christensen, CFA, Portfolio Manager; & Katy Nuss, CFA, Vice President, Fixed Income Client Portfolio Management

What could investors see from the Fed for the balance of 2022?

Is there a light at the end of the rate hike tunnel? That's what many investors are wondering on the heels of last month's Fed symposium in Jackson Hole. And the answer to that question will depend on if the Fed believes it has done enough to bring down inflation. In fact, Fed officials are looking for evidence - beyond a reasonable doubt - that this year's rate increases and tightening of financial conditions will bring inflation back down to 2%. They need to see concrete data that economic growth is slowing and that the labor market is weakening.

The good news is that there are some indications that economic activity is decelerating heading into the last quarter of the year. The housing market is weakening, as decade-high mortgage rates are leading to steep declines in home sales and new home starts. Manufacturing data is deteriorating, with the ISM manufacturing index slumping to its lowest level since June 2020. However, how quickly these indicators translate into a slowdown in employment and inflation is the open question.

So far, inflation pressures remain persistent and robust, with over 70% of items measured in the July consumer price index ((CPI)) increasing above a 4% annualized rate. And the tight labor market has not shown any signs of cooling, with unemployment back to pre-pandemic levels and wage growth exceeding expectations.

Looking for signs that the Fed's policies are working

Economic driver

Examples of data

What is the Fed looking for?

Inflation

Headline inflation (CPI/PCE), inflation momentum, inflation expectation
Sustained deceleration toward 2% and anchored expectation

Employment

Wages, job openings, unemployment
Lower wages and higher unemployment

Growth

GDP, household consumption, manufacturing, housing market (e.g., housing starts, sales, prices)
Slowdown in household and corporate activity

Source: Columbia Threadneedle Investments

Because monetary policy acts with a lag, we have not yet seen the full impact of higher rates on the economy. This means the Fed must be nimble and act with little long-term insight. While one of the main takeaways from the Fed's July meeting was a supposed shift away from forecasting subsequent rate hikes (forward guidance), the Fed is continuing a pattern of reacting to data as it comes in. This "data dependence" will continue to guide Fed policy for the rest of the year, and given the magnitude of hikes over the last few weeks and decelerating growth, the endpoint for the hiking cycle is more uncertain.

Right now the Fed is fighting for its credibility. And for officials, the cost of doing too little - allowing inflation to become entrenched - outweighs the cost of doing too much. Fed Chair Jerome Powell has signaled that he will risk sacrificing employment and potentially over-tightening policy to break inflation. Therefore there must be overwhelming evidence of success before the Fed brings the tightening cycle to an end. With data currently raising more questions than it answers, the Fed is under pressure to deliver more tightening. For fixed-income investors, more tightening could mean elevated volatility, especially for shorter maturity yields. For long-term bonds, the greater risk of economic contraction could increase demand and cause their yields to fall. This would result in an even deeper inversion of the yield curve, which makes long-end exposure more attractive.

© 2016-2022 Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC. All rights reserved.

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The views expressed are as of the date given, may change as market or other conditions change, and may differ from views expressed by other Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC ((CMIA)) associates or affiliates. Actual investments or investment decisions made by CMIA and its affiliates, whether for its own account or on behalf of clients, may not necessarily reflect the views expressed. This information is not intended to provide investment advice and does not take into consideration individual investor circumstances. Investment decisions should always be made based on an investor's specific financial needs, objectives, goals, time horizon and risk tolerance. Asset classes described may not be appropriate for all investors. Past performance does not guarantee future results, and no forecast should be considered a guarantee either. Since economic and market conditions change frequently, there can be no assurance that the trends described here will continue or that any forecasts are accurate.

Columbia Funds and Columbia Acorn Funds are distributed by Columbia Management Investment Distributors, Inc., member FINRA. Columbia Funds are managed by Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC and Columbia Acorn Funds are managed by Columbia Wanger Asset Management, LLC, a subsidiary of Columbia Management Investment Advisers, LLC.

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NOT FDIC INSURED · No Bank Guarantee · May Lose Value

Original Post

Editor's Note: The summary bullets for this article were chosen by Seeking Alpha editors.

For further details see:

A Data-Dependent Fed And Future Monetary Policy
Stock Information

Company Name: Invesco 1-30 Laddered Treasury ETF
Stock Symbol: PLW
Market: NASDAQ

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