Investors Gambling On A Pivot By The U.S. Fed May Get Burned

 | Jul 22, 2022 11:10

  • Stocks prices have risen sharply over the past few trading session
  • Seems investors expecting Fed to pivot to a more dovish stance
  • This time is different because growth isn’t the issue; inflation is
  • Markets have recently moved up from their lows as some investors seem to think that inflation has peaked and slowing growth will cause the Fed to pivot. That may or may not be the correct interpretation. It is too early to make that determination.

    The Fed's policy changes have yet to prove they have had a significant impact on US inflation. While it takes time for the Fed rate hikes and the removal of accommodative policy to filter through the economy, there has been no sign that inflation has even slowed materially. Indeed, there is no significant change to suggest that the Fed is winning the war.

    At this point, the three-month Treasury bill rate is trading at a significant discount to the current yoy pace of the consumer price index, a spread of nearly 6.5%. The only time that spread was more considerable came in 1980, when the CPI climbed at more than 14% yoy, and the three-month bill rate plunged to around 6.75%. Historically, when inflation was falling from 1980 through early 2000, the three-month bill rate was consistently over the yoy inflation. Even if inflation trends begin to soften, it is too early to say that the Fed pivot will result in a rate cut.