The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Taming inflation without killing growth

Treasuries give Fed a vote of confidence

-

“If inflation comes down to what breakevens are pricing today, then a soft landing is possible.” Rick Rieder

NEW YORK: The bond market is signalling that in the matter of the Federal Reserve (Fed) versus inflation, its money is on the US central bank.

Demand for inflation protection – as measured by yields on inflation-protected Treasury debt – keeps falling.

The five-year expected inflation rate implied by those yields is back below 2.6%, down from a March peak of 3.76%.

Meanwhile the market’s expected peak in the Fed’s policy rate remains below 4%, and long-dated Treasury yields have rebounded from levels that suggested a recession was in the cards.

“If inflation comes down to what breakevens are pricing today, then a soft landing is possible,” said Rick Rieder, the chief investment officer of global fixed income at Blackrock Inc, the world’s biggest asset manager.

Breakeven rates for Treasury inflation-protected securities, or TIPS, represent the market’s expectatio­n for the annual inflation rate for the maturity of the debt.

While commodity price trends help explain the drop in shorter-term breakeven inflation rates – the futures prices of crude oil and petrol fell to the lowest levels since January this week -- longer-term TIPS breakevens are back below 2.5%, even as consumer price index (CPI) inflation was 8.5% in July.

That’s a vote of confidence in Fed officials including chair Jerome Powell, whose latest public comments last Thursday emphasised the importance of not allowing high inflation expectatio­ns to become entrenched with consumers.

“The clock is ticking” on keeping those expectatio­ns in check, he said.

Powell’s comments largely cemented the view that the Fed will opt for another threequart­er-point rate increase on Sept 21, the next decision date, bringing the total amount of tightening since March to three percentage points.

Fed governor Christophe­r Waller and St Louis Fed president James Bullard, speaking last Friday, also backed a larger hike.

Fed officials customaril­y refrain from commenting during the week preceding a scheduled meeting, a period that has begun.

As recently as late August, a half-point rate increase was viewed as the likelier outcome, based on the pricing of swaps referencin­g Fed meeting dates.

Now it would take much weaker-than-expected August inflation data – to be released tomorrow – to revive talk of a smaller increase of 50 basis points.

In July, the annual CPI rate slowed more than expected to 8.5%. Further decelerati­on is estimated for August, to 8%.

Even as swaps assigned more than 80% odds to a bigger September rate increase, the expected peak in the Fed’s policy rate – in March 2023 – remained below 4%.

The swaps curve continues to price in a quarter-point rate cut from the peak level by the end of 2023, but as recently as a month ago it priced in a half point.

Consistent with that, this week’s increase in longer-dated Treasury yields – the 30-year bond’s exceeded 3.51% for the first time since 2014 – lessened the inversion of the yield curve, effectivel­y downgradin­g the chances of a recession.

To be sure, this week’s monthly auctions of three, 10 and 30-year Treasuries today and tomorrow may create upward pressure on yields that could subsequent­ly fade.

This week also brings August retail sales data Thursday and the University of Michigan’s survey-based measure of inflation expectatio­ns Friday. — Bloomberg

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia