FED: FOMC: QT Taper Not Assured, Powell Defense Of Easing Bias Eyed
Some key aspects to watch in today's FOMC decision and press conference:
* Statement: MNI doesn't expect any major changes to the statement, including
in the requirement in the forward guidance for "greater confidence" on
inflation before cutting. It's possible the Fed changes "Inflation has eased
over the past year but remains elevated" in a more hawkish direction.
* QT Taper: In terms of a potential surprise upon the decision release, while
we agree it is likely that the Fed announces a QT taper, there is probably a
better chance it doesn't than the (now overwhelming) consensus expects. The
data/market indicators/FOMC members don't seem to suggest much urgency and
waiting another month would be entirely justifiable.
* Press Conference: We anticipate Powell will effectively confirm that the
recent data mean easing as soon as June is a doubtful prospect unless major
surprises emerge. However, overall, the FOMC's bias toward easing later this
year is set to remain.
* It would be hard for Powell to categorically rule out possible hikes in
future, though it could generate a market-moving headline given how at odds
this would be to the formal forward guidance that is explicitly pointing to
the next move being a cut.
* More likely, Powell will affirm that the Committee's base case is that the
disinflationary progress they had anticipated is delayed, but not (yet)
denied. Powell's view appears to be that policy is sufficiently restrictive,
and "well positioned to handle the risks we face we can maintain the
current level of restriction for as long as needed". This is a higher-for
longer view, not a reconsideration of the easing bias, and we would expect it
would take at least a couple more upside inflation surprises to force a
serious reconsideration.
* We will be paying attention to how Powell characterizes the evolution of the
FOMC's perspective since March, however. This includes that meeting's sudden
emphasis on "unexpected" labor market weakness as a possible reason to cut
rates, Powell's affirmation that the Committee saw policy as restrictive and
was being felt through the economy, and of course, whether the 3 cuts in
March's Dot Plot are still the core scenario.
* It will also be interesting if the FOMC sees threats to the soft landing
thesis that has been adopted in the past couple of quarterly economic
projections - are there concerns that the labor market and activity need to
weaken more than currently expected in order to get inflation back to target?
The FOMC probably remains cautiously optimistic that it won't come to that,
but less so than a month ago.