Treasury Market Predicts Fed Rate Hikes Are Done

 | Feb 03, 2023 14:47

The Federal Reserve raised interest rates again this week and Chairman Jerome Powell says more hikes are coming. The bond market disagrees.

The 2-Year Treasury yield – widely monitored as a proxy for rate expectations – continues to trade well below its recent peak, holding steady at 4.09% on Thursday (Feb. 2). After the Fed’s 25-basis-points increase in the target rate to a 4.50% - 4.75% range on Wednesday, the spread widened and so the market’s implied forecast for a rate cut strengthened.

At the press conference following the Fed’s rate hike, Powell said, “It is our judgment that we’re not yet in a sufficiently restrictive policy stance, which is why we say that we expect ongoing hikes will be appropriate.”

But “the markets aren’t buying what the Fed is peddling,” advises Kroll Institute’s Global Chief Economist Megan Greene.

The diverging trends in the 2-year rate vs. Fed funds highlight this contrast. The downside bias in the 2-year yield vs. rising Fed funds implies that the market’s implied forecast that the end of rate hikes and the start of rate cuts is near.