Wednesday, 5/1/2024 p.m.

  • Stocks closed mixed, as Fed Chair Powell downplays the notion of rate hikes:;: Stocks were mixed on Wednesday, closing below their highs of the session, after the FOMC kept rates on hold at 5.25% - 5.5%, as expected. Fed Chair Jerome Powell also indicated that is "unlikely that our next move will be a hike." Powell's personal view is that inflation will move lower later in the year, although his confidence in that view is lower after the recent string of upside inflation surprises. Markets nonetheless welcomed this less hawkish view from the Fed chair. In our view, the Fed can still be patient, but it remains on track for the first rate cut this year. Treasury bond yields also moved notably lower after the Fed meeting, with the 2-year Treasury yield down by 0.08% to around 4.95%*. These moves lower were also welcomed by markets, as the recent surge in Treasury yields had sparked volatility in both stocks and bonds.
  • The Fed delivers a less hawkish message:Markets breathed a bit of a sigh of relief, as the Federal Reserve delivered a message that seemed less hawkish than expected. The Fed kept rates on hold at 5.25% - 5.5% today, as expected, and Powell's commentary during the press conference appeared less hawkish overall. While he did acknowledge the recent string of upside surprises in inflation during the first quarter has not given the Fed greater confidence that rate cuts are appropriate, Chair Powell noted that "it is unlikely that our next move will be a hike." This provided some relief to investors who were worried that rate hikes were back on the table for the Fed this year. In addition, when the Fed chair was asked if recent inflation data was anything beyond typical bumpiness, he responded with, "not really." This implies that the Fed does not see a material reacceleration in inflation ahead of us. Nonetheless, in our view, the Fed will need to see a string of lower inflation data in the months ahead before signaling a rate cut. We still believe, however, that this may happen by the back half of 2024. The Fed also outlined that it would slow the pace of its quantitative-tightening program by allowing $25 billion per month of Treasury bonds to mature from the central bank's balance sheet, down from the current $60 billion cap*. Slowing this program is also a form of policy-easing, putting less pressure on Treasury and mortgage bond markets.
  • U.S. jobs report on Friday: In addition to the Fed meeting this week, investors will also digest the nonfarm-jobs report for the month of April. Expectations call for total jobs added to cool, from 303,000 last month to 240,000 this month*. The unemployment rate is expected to remain steady at a healthy 3.8%, while the important average hourly earnings figure is forecast to tick lower, from 4.1% year-over-year to 4.0%*. In our view, the U.S. labor market has been a critical element of consumer resilience, as the strong labor market has been a key reason that households continue to spend. However, we could see a downshift in the labor market, as leading indicators like job openings and quit rates have started to cool. While we would not expect a meaningful reacceleration in unemployment, some easing in the labor market – driven by increasing supply of labor and cooling demand – could cause wage gains to moderate further. In today's Fed press conference, Chair Powell also noted that a slowing labor market could be a risk to household consumption broadly. This, in our view, could also support some easing in services inflation and put downward pressure on core inflation.

Mona Mahajan
Investment Strategy 

*FactSet.


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