Central Bank Watch – Fed Hawks, South Korea, New Zealand and Turkey Ahead

Central bankers this week were on a higher for longer mantra. We also saw another big career switch with Vice Chair Brainard heading to the White house and Chicago Fed President Goolsbee is being considered to replace Lael Brainard as Fed Vice Chair, according to The Wall Street Journal. Bank Indonesia held its key rate at 5.75% while Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas announced a 50 bps rate hike to 6.00%. We had a slew of Fed speakers comment on rates, with Hawks Mester and Bullard dominating. Reserve Bank of Australia Governor Lowe said that there is some early evidence that demand is moderating, adding that policymakers are unsure how high rates will have to go.

In the week ahead we have the FOMC Meeting minutes and speeches by Fed officials. Central banks in South Korea, New Zealand, and Turkey will have monetary policy meetings.

Central bank monetary policy decisions and market activity interest rate decisions can have a dominant effect on financial markets, fiscal policy and geopolitics. We keep an eye on key banker developments, what they mean and what is ahead.

Central Bank Weekly Analysis and Outlook – Banker dynamics are complex. There are myriad facets to analyze and contemplate.

To say central bankers, have issues is an understatement. Already grappling with the quickest inflation in decades they now have these decisions to make, forcefully raise borrowing costs to defend currencies and risk hurting growth, spend reserves that took years to build to intervene in foreign exchange markets, or simply stand aside and let the market play out.

Weekly Recap and Outlook

This week’s central bank main events were the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) Chief Low addressing the Senate and a series of Fed speakers with mainly hawkish remarks. We also saw the market reaction to Kazuo Ueda announced as the next BoJ Governor. Kazuo Ueda is a former Professor and BoJ Board Member. Bank Indonesia held its key rate at 5.75% while Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas announced a 50 bps rate hike to 6.00%.

  • Chicago Fed President Goolsbee is being considered to replace Lael Brainard as Fed Vice Chair, according to The Wall Street Journal.
  • Cleveland Fed President Mester (non-FOMC voter) said she advocated for a 50-basis point rate hike at the February 1 FOMC meeting, 
  • St. Louis Fed President Bullard (non-FOMC voter) said he wouldn’t rule out supporting a 50-basis point rate hike at the March FOMC meeting
  • Fed Governor Bowman (FOMC voter) said that rate hikes should continue until “a lot more progress” has been made on inflation.
  • Reserve Bank of Australia Governor Lowe said that there is some early evidence that demand is moderating, adding that policymakers are unsure how high rates will have to go.

“Kazuo Ueda, the surprise pick to become the Bank of Japan’s next governor, will be tasked with keeping confidence in the BOJ’s policy path without jarring global markets and heaping strain on the finances of a government that just can’t stop spending. Given the tricky mission ahead, Prime Minister Fumio Kishida was widely expected to opt for the safest pair of hands he could find: Masayoshi Amamiya… But instead Ueda, a university professor and MIT PhD, is now set for the top slot… ‘The Bank of Japan’s current policy is appropriate and monetary easing needs to be continued at this point,’ he told reporters Friday… There will be precious little patience awaiting Ueda when he takes the helm in April as market players wait for another opportunity to bombard the central bank’s stimulus program with the kind of attacks that toppled a similar yield-based framework in Australia. ‘It’s hard to overstate the challenge,’ said Takahiro Sekido, chief Japan strategist at MUFG Bank Ltd. in Tokyo and a former BOJ official.

‘Saying it’s a rough ride isn’t even close. The BOJ has done so much in the past decade and the policy got so complicated — so many markets will be affected by even a slight policy change’… ‘It is absolutely inevitable that the BOJ will have to dismantle its quantitative easing fairly quickly,’ says Amir Anvarzadeh, a strategist at Asymmetric Advisors…, who has tracked Japanese markets for three decades. ‘It’s coming’… In an illustration of just how costly the battle is proving, the BOJ shelled out in January more than three times the amount the government earmarked for additional defense spending in the coming fiscal year. With inflation at a four-decade high, a bond market showing signs of dysfunction and indications that wages are finally going up, the BOJ is running out of reasons to keep adding to a mountain of bond purchases that already outsizes the world’s third-largest economy.”

February 10 – Bloomberg (Toru Fujioka):

Eyes on the Bond Market

U.S. Treasury yields closed a down week on a modestly higher note Friday, backing down from overnight highs tempering some selling pressure in the stock market.  The pullback snapped a three-day skid in the 5-yr note and longer tenors, earlier selling briefly saw the 5-yr yield to its highest level since early November. The 2-yr note yield hit 4.71% overnight and settled the session down two basis points to 4.61%. The 10-yr note yield hit 3.92% overnight and settled down two basis points Friday to 3.83%.

Yield Watch

  • 2-yr: -2 bps to 4.61% (+10 bps for the week)
  • 3-yr: -2 bps to 4.32% (+12 bps for the week)
  • 5-yr: -1 bp to 4.04% (+12 bps for the week)
  • 10-yr: -2 bps to 3.83% (+9 bps for the week)
  • 30-yr: -2 bps to 3.89% (+6 bps for the week)

Highlights – Federal Reserve

  • Federal Reserve Credit declined $25.9bn last week to $8.398 TN.
  • Fed Credit was down $503bn from the June 22nd peak.
  • Over the past 178 weeks, Fed Credit expanded $4.671 TN, or 125%.
  • Fed Credit inflated $5.587 Trillion, or 199%, over the past 535 weeks.
  • Fed holdings for foreign owners of Treasury, Agency Debt last week rose $7.0bn to $3.332 TN.
  • “Custody holdings” were down $134bn, or 3.9%, y-o-y.

Rate markets saw Fed rate hike expectations continued to creep higher with the implied likelihood of a third 25 bps hike in June increasing to 65.1% from 51.7% yesterday and 41.8% a week ago.

Fed 2023 Bank Stress Tests.

The Federal Reserve on Thursday released the hypothetical scenarios for its annual bank stress tests. This year, 23 banks will be tested against a severe global recession with heightened stress in both commercial and residential real estate markets, as well as in corporate debt markets. Last year the Fed found all 34 large banks tested remained well above their risk-based minimum capital requirements, and the Fed announced no restrictions relating to dividends and buybacks.

Central Bank Highlights This Past Week:

Most of the G10 central banks may complete their rate hike cycles around the middle of the year or earlier, the unwinding of central bank balance sheets may continue longer, depending on the damage done.

  • Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) on Thursday: The Monetary Board of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), Philippines central bank announced a 50 bps rate hike to 6.00%.
  • Bank Indonesia on Thursday: Bank Indonesia held its key rate at 5.75%.

Central Bank Week Ahead:

In the week ahead we have the FOMC Meeting minutes and speeches by Fed officials. Central banks in South Korea, New Zealand, and Turkey will have monetary policy meetings.

The Fed’s preferred PCE inflation gauges are released on Friday for January. Headline PCE inflation is likely to rise at a slightly slower pace than headline CPI’s 0.5% m/m gain and also for core PCE inflation ex-food and energy that should rise a little more softly than the 0.4% m/m core CPI gain.

In the week ahead we get three central banks delivering policy decisions.

This Week’s Interest Rate Announcements (Time E.T.)

  • Tuesday, February 21, 2023
  • 20:00 RBNZ Interest Rate Decision
  • Wednesday, February 22, 2023
  • 20:00 Bank of Korea Interest Rate Decision
  • Thursday, February 23, 2023
  • 06:00 Central Bank of Turkey Interest Rate Decision

This Week’s Central Bank Speeches, Meetings (Time E.T.)

Monday February 20, 2023

  • Presidents Day in the US
  • Family Day in Canada
  • Tentative German Buba Monthly Report
  • 14:30 BoE Deputy Governor Woods Speaks
  • 19:30 RBA Meeting Minutes

Tuesday, February 21, 2023

  • 20:00 RBNZ Interest Rate Decision
  • 20:00 RBNZ Monetary Policy Statement
  • 21:00 RBNZ Press Conference

Wednesday, February 22, 2023

  • 03:00 European Central Bank Non-monetary Policy Meeting
  • 06:30 RBI MPC Meeting Minutes
  • 14:00 FOMC Meeting Minutes
  • 18:30 FOMC Member Williams Speaks
  • 20:00 Bank of Korea Interest Rate Decision

Thursday, February 23, 2023

  • 00:15 RBA Assist Gov Bullock Speaks
  • 04:30 BoE MPC Member Mann
  • 06:00 Central Bank of Turkey Interest Rate Decision
  • 10:50 FOMC Member Bostic Speaks
  • 19:15 German Buba President Nagel Speaks
  • 19:15 German Buba Vice President Buch Speaks

Friday, February 24, 2023

  • 10:15 Fed Governor Jefferson Speaks
  • 10:15 FOMC Member Mester Speaks
  • 11:30 MPC Member Tenreyro Speaks

Federal Reserve FOMC Schedule 2023

  • January 31-February 1, 2023 (second day: statement released 1400 EST/1900 GMT; news conference expected 1430 EST/1930 GMT)
  • March 21-22 (second day: statement released 1400 EDT/1800 GMT; news conference expected 1430 EDT/1830 GMT)
  • May 2-3 (second day: statement released 1400 EDT/1800 GMT; news conference expected 1430 EDT/1830 GMT)
  • June 13-14 (second day: statement released 1400 EDT/1800 GMT; news conference expected 1430 EDT/1830 GMT)
  • July 25-26 (second day: statement released 1400 EDT/1800 GMT; news conference expected 1430 EDT/1830 GMT)
  • September 19-20 (second day: statement released 1400 EDT/1800 GMT; news conference expected 1430 EDT/1830 GMT)
  • October 31-November 1 (second day: statement released 1400 EDT/1800 GMT; news conference expected 1430 EDT/1830 GMT)
  • December 12-13 (second day: statement released 1400 EST/1900 GMT; news conference expected 1430 EST/1930 GMT)

The Fed with a Strong US Dollar

The strong dollar is likely to negatively affect the US economic outlook and could alter the Federal Reserve terminal interest rate, economists surveyed by Bloomberg said. Just 28% saw the currency strength as unlikely to have any impact.

The survey of 40 economists was conducted Oct. 21-26.

  • 44% said they believed the Fed could fully complete its aggressive rate tightening despite possible stresses.
  • 38% said the policy makers would be forced to cut rates earlier than expected and
  • 18% said the Fed would not be able to raise rates as much as planned.
  • Survey respondents expect rates to peak at 5% early next year and a majority of the economists now expect a US and global recession.

The Fed as expected raised another 50 basis-points last meeting. The median estimate for the terminal rate in 2023 had been raised to 5.10% versus the September projection of 4.60%. The value of the dollar is an important component to lowering inflation. A stronger dollar tends to dampen inflation by reducing the costs of imports and lowering domestic production as it raises export prices.

“Usually the trade deficit would balloon when the dollar appreciated as much as we had seen since last year. But that effect has been curiously absent so far, even as we are already about five quarters into the appreciation process. One possible explanation is that US is increasing its exports in energy products. The fact that this tightening channel of dollar is absent means that the dollar appreciation is less contractionary to the economy than historically.”

Anna Wong (Bloomberg chief US economist)

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Sources: TC WSJ Bloomberg Scotia Bank

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