Morning Bid: Markets fear Fed floor at 4%, dollar booms


A look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets from Mike Dolan

Although the Federal Reserve’s “hawkish cut” on Thursday had been broadly expected, markets now fear 4% policy rates will be the floor for the coming year at least – and no further easing until midyear or later.

The picture painted by the Fed removes monetary easing as tailwind from the stock market for months and has seen the dollar rocket to its highest in more than two years – bowling over emerging, developed and crypto currencies alike.

Lifting their median inflation forecast for next year by 0.3 percentage point to 2.5% but only nudging the GDP growth up a tenth to 2.1%, Fed policymakers also raised their policy rate forecasts for the next two years by half a point to 3.9% and 3.4% respectively.

And they lifted the longer-term horizon too, with projections for the long-term neutral rate nudged up to 3% for the first time since 2018.

“It’s a new phase and we’re going to be cautious about further cuts,” Chair Jerome Powell said after the Fed announced the widely expected quarter-point cut into a 4.25-4.50% range.

Markets took the cue and futures now don’t fully price another quarter-point reduction until June at the earliest – and doubt there’ll be any more over the rest of the year.

Already aggravated Treasuries got whacked again, with 10-year and 30-year yields vaulting 4.5% and 4.7% respectively to hit their highest since May. The 2-10 year yield curve steepened to its highest in three months.

Compounding the angst, debt ceiling worries crept back onto the radar. President-elect Donald Trump on Wednesday disrupted bipartisan efforts to avert a government shutdown as he pressured his Republicans in Congress to reject a stopgap bill to keep the government funded past the end of the week.

The cocktail of events left no Christmas cheer for an historically expensive stock market that’s already seen momentum slowing and is increasingly fearful of investors’ almost-unchallenged bullishness for 2025. Some now suggest most of the positive post-election fiscal and economic scenario as well as the U.S. ‘exceptionalism’ theme is already in the price.

The benchmark S&P500 and blue-chip Dow Jones indexes saw their biggest one-day percentage decline since early August and the Nasdaq clocked its biggest drop since July. The small cap Russell 2000 dropped 4.4%, its biggest drop since June 2022.

Even though it’s still up 12% for 2024 to date, the Dow suffered its 10th straight session of declines – the longest streak of daily losses since 1974.



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