Bond traders start to see crack in Fed’s resolve about inflation

epa06328278 US Chair of the Federal Reserve Janet Yellen attends the European Central Bank Communications Conference 'Communications challenges for policy effectiveness, accountability and reputation' in Frankfurt Main, Germany, 14 November 2017.  EPA-EFE/ARMANDO BABANI

Bloomberg

Traders are about to find out just how worried Federal Reserve officials are about the outlook for inflation. The depth of that angst has ramifications for the US bond market’s dominant trend: the flattening yield curve.
Fed Chair Janet Yellen and the nominee to succeed her, Jerome Powell, lead a busy lineup of central bankers speaking this week. They may opine on inflation after minutes of their most recent meeting showed several policy makers were concerned about low expectations for consumer-price gains and underscored that further interest-rate hikes will hinge on economic data. It’s only fitting, then, that the Fed’s preferred gauge of price growth will also be released this week, with a survey of economists indicating it’s likely to slow to a 1.5 percent year-on-year pace.
For the bond market, the expectation of further rate hikes amid below-target inflation has big implications. It’s been perhaps the key reason why the US curve has flattened at the fastest pace in three years. That compression has already elicited responses from some Fed officials, and investors will be attuned to any indications from Powell or Yellen about how that might affect their thinking. After the minutes, traders may question the Fed’s resolve anew, pondering whether they were wrong to push two-year Treasury yields to the highest level since 2008.
The bond market isn’t going as far as taking the latest fretting among policy makers as reason to abandon bets on a December rate hike. The implied probability of an increase next month is more than 90 percent, based on overnight index swaps and the effective fed funds rate. But investors are once again tempering their enthusiasm about the central bank’s ability to stoke consumer prices in the longer term, with so-called breakeven rates on inflation-linked bonds dipping. The dollar’s fledgling rally also came to a halt with the currency dropping to an almost two-month low after Yellen cautioned about allowing inflation to drift lower.
Yellen and Powell will both be in Washington this week. Yellen will go before the Joint Economic Committee of Congress, while Powell will appear at the Senate Banking Committee as part of his confirmation process. Since the Fed’s November 1 decision, the yield curve from two to 10 years has flattened by 15 basis points and is now close to the lowest level in a decade. Fed officials including James Bullard and Robert Kaplan have given their views on the trend in the curve since then and they’re on tap to speak again this week.
Senate Banking Committee will hold a hearing on Powell, while Dudley will speak at a conference on the Treasury market and the Philadelphia Fed’s Patrick Harker will speak on financial safety for an aging population on November 29.

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