More stories

  • in

    What to Watch at the Fed’s Final Meeting of 2023

    Federal Reserve officials are widely expected to leave interest rates unchanged, but economists will watch for hints at what’s next.Federal Reserve officials will wrap up a year of aggressive inflation fighting on Wednesday afternoon, when they are expected to use their final policy decision of 2023 to leave interest rates at their highest level in 22 years.The Fed is finishing the year on pause after the most intense campaign of interest rate increases in decades, one meant to snuff out the rapid price gains that have been bedeviling consumers since 2021.Because inflation has now moderated substantially, central bankers have increasingly signaled that they may be done raising borrowing costs, which are set to a range of 5.25 to 5.5 percent. The question investors will be focused on Wednesday is how much rates are expected to come down in 2024 — and when those cuts might begin.The Fed will release its statement and a fresh set of quarterly economic projections at 2 p.m., followed by a news conference with Jerome H. Powell, the Fed chair, at 2:30 p.m. Here’s what to watch.We are having trouble retrieving the article content.Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.Thank you for your patience while we verify access.Already a subscriber?  More

  • in

    Inflation’s bumpy descent

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.This article is an on-site version of our Unhedged newsletter. Sign up here to get the newsletter sent straight to your inbox every weekdayGood morning. Oracle reported a slightly disappointing quarter, and the $275bn software company’s shares fell 12 per cent yesterday. There is a lot of optimism in markets right now, creating the possibility of bitter disappointments. If you know which stock will get whacked next, by all means email us at once: [email protected] and [email protected] wrote yesterday that only a ferociously hot CPI report would change the market consensus. In the event, the report was meek and mild. The two-year yield, highly sensitive to incoming economic data, did not budge. The report did, however, contain several interesting hints about how inflation’s descent may play out. First, core goods prices fell 0.3 per cent month over month. Goods deflation has been a feature of inflation reports for half a year, driven by declining used car prices. This time, however, used cars and trucks actually rose 1.6 per cent in November, the first monthly increase since May. Core goods ex-used cars fell 0.6 per cent, the biggest decline since early 2020. Some analysts suggested holiday discounting was at work.Next, shelter. Lagged CPI rental inflation should follow private-market rents down as newly signed leases enter the official data. But the process is taking longer than many expected. Rents rose 0.4 per cent in November, an uptick from the previous month. One reason is that the standard measures of market rents, from the likes of Zillow and Apartment List, are relatively new. “We haven’t tested this [relationship] over multiple cycles,” says Carl Riccadonna, US economist at BNP Paribas. “We know generally how the relationship should work, but don’t necessarily understand nuances [such as] magnitude or exactly how long lags will take.”Eventually, shelter inflation should fall sharply. Researchers at Penn State University keep a live model of inflation adjusted using real-time market rental data. After those adjustments, core inflation is already back to target:Finally, non-shelter services (aka “supercore”) jumped higher, to 0.4 per cent in November from 0.2 per cent in October. The culprit was an abnormally large monthly increase in medical care prices, which rose 0.6 per cent. Despite a slight deceleration, car insurance inflation kept up its relentless rise, up 1 per cent in November.Put together, these points provide a sense of why inflation’s descent may not be smooth. The Federal Reserve has strongly suggested it will look past goods deflation; shelter is taking its sweet time to fall; and non-housing services are very volatile. None of that necessarily violates the view that inflation is on course to get sustainably into the 2’s, but the lack of clarity gives the Fed’s hawks a reason not to rush.Which volatility is right?Here’s a striking chart:That is the ratio of the Move index of implied short-term Treasury volatility to the Vix index of implied short-term S&P 500 volatility. Both indices are based on option prices. It shows that implied US interest rate volatility is higher, relative to expected US equity volatility, than it has been in almost 30 years.From a certain perspective, it is not that weird that equity volatility is so low or (in the derivative-industry argot) “cheap” relative to rates volatility. We are at a transition period in monetary policy which follows the most violent inflationary incident since the early 1980s. What rates do next is very uncertain! At the same time, the economy, while it is slowing, is doing so from a high level and in an orderly fashion, and so equities ought to be OK whichever way rates go, unless there is recessionary rate collapse. That summary is too simple and probably too optimistic, but there is a certain logic to it.In another way, though, the divergence between the two volatilities is very weird. Volatility in the cost of money should show up, one way or another, in the volatility of equities; and the economic uncertainties that make it hard to know where rates are headed ought to be reflected in equity prices, too. It is therefore tempting to declare that one of the two volatilities is “right”: that equity risk is underpriced or bond risk is overpriced, or a bit of both. Nitin Saksena, head of US equity derivative research at Bank of America, offered several explanations for the gap:Fundamentals may justify it (in roughly the way I described above).It reflects supply and demand for rate and equity options. Excessive selling of equity derivatives — for example increasingly popular covered-call strategies — depress their prices and therefore equity volatility.Technical or “mechanical” factors suppress equity volatility. For example, low correlation among S&P 500 constituents this year, which means individual stock moves cancel each other out, diminishes volatility at the index level. While rates volatility broadly reflects current economic uncertainty, equities and equity volatility have become “numb” to it because equity investors “have been conditioned over the years to buy dips and fear upside risk more than downside risk”.Saksena thinks that the first three explanations are playing a role, but are not strong enough to explain the extreme divergence. The fourth explanation is crucial.If Saksena is right, one would expect that equity investors will be shaken out of their trance by some sort of shock eventually. But how to time such an event? He writes:A lot must go right for low Vix to remain the norm for all of 2024 . . . equities would need to stay on the soft-landing “balance beam” and avoid getting knocked off by either recession or higher-for-longer rates — both equity vol positive historically. And at the single stock level, an “immaculate rotation” out of the Mag 7 [Big Tech stocks] into this year’s laggards would need to dominate, as the alternatives of (i) the Mag 7 becoming more magnificent and trading at higher P/Es or (ii) the Mag 7 bubble bursting should [both] drive equity vol higher.Amy Wu Silverman, equity derivatives strategist at RBC Capital Markets, emphasises the problem of timing:From a cross-asset perspective it is very compelling to say “equity vol looks cheap” relative to rates vol, but the reality is we can stay in this framework for quite a while. It is always an issue in our world [derivatives trading] that we don’t know “when the music stops”. Take a look at all of 2017 for instance leading into the Volmageddon of 2018 . . . [with that said], what is the market least positioned for in terms of options[?] a gap to the downside in equity markets from some sort of exogenous shock.Be careful out there.One good readFiona Hill: “Ukraine has become a battlefield for America and America’s own future.”FT Unhedged podcastCan’t get enough of Unhedged? Listen to our new podcast, hosted by Ethan Wu and Katie Martin, for a 15-minute dive into the latest markets news and financial headlines, twice a week. Catch up on past editions of the newsletter here.Recommended newsletters for youSwamp Notes — Expert insight on the intersection of money and power in US politics. Sign up hereChris Giles on Central Banks — Your essential guide to money, interest rates, inflation and what central banks are thinking. Sign up here More

  • in

    Why are US stocks sluggish? Some blame a looming $5 trillion options expiration

    NEW YORK (Reuters) -Dealers squaring their books ahead of an options expiration that is set to be the largest on record for S&P 500-linked derivatives may be helping to tamp down swings in U.S. stocks, market participants said.Some $5 trillion in U.S. stock options are set to expire on Friday, 80% in S&P 500-linked contracts – the largest such expiration in at least 20 years – according to Asym500 MRA Institutional, a unit of derivatives strategy and execution firm Macro Risk Advisors.While such events can exacerbate volatility, strategists say market participants’ behavior ahead of the upcoming expiration has been muting stock gyrations and may be one reason equities have traded in a tight range over the last few weeks.The S&P 500 is up 21% this year, following a nearly 13% rally from its October lows. More recently, however, market moves have been subdued.The benchmark index has not logged a greater than 1% move in either direction for 19 straight sessions, the longest such streak since early August. At the same time, the Cboe Volatility Index stands at 12.07, a near 4-year low. Another example of the market’s sluggish trading can be found in the 10-day realized volatility for the S&P 500, which is how much the index has swung over the last 10 sessions. That measure stands at 6.8%, after touching a low of 4.5% in late November. By comparison, it stood as high as 22.5% in March, when a regional banking crisis rocked markets.The positioning of options dealers who act as intermediaries between buyers and sellers of derivatives has been one factor in keeping stock swings in check. Options trading volume is on pace for a record year with average daily volume of 44 million contracts, according to data from clearing house OCC. That volume has been boosted in part by the popularity of exchange-traded funds (ETFs) that sell options to generate income that have doubled in size in 2023 and now control about $60 billion, according to a Nomura analysis. Robust options selling activity by these ETFs has left dealers loaded with options contracts going into the last expiration of the year.In market parlance, the dealers are net long “gamma,” and must continuously sell stock futures when equities rally and buy futures when markets sell off to keep their position neutral.With the huge amount of options set to expire, that buying and selling has had a knock-on effect of keeping stocks in a tighter trading range, market participants said. The dealers’ positioning “is more than likely to arrest any deeper selloff between now and year-end,” Nomura strategist Charlie McElligott said in a note on Tuesday. Market participants have pinned the muted stock moves on other factors as well, including volatility targeting funds and commodity trading advisers, as well as the VIX’s historical tendency to stay subdued once it hits the bottom of its trading range. The lull in volatility could extend to Wednesday’s Federal Reserve meeting. While the central bank is expected to leave rates unchanged, investors are keen for hints on whether policymakers are pivoting towards cutting rates sooner, an expectation that has fueled the rally in stocks this quarter. Expiration is likely to loosen the options market’s vice-like grip on stocks, said Brent Kochuba, founder of options analytic service SpotGamma. Markets faced a similar situation two years ago, when a similarly large options expiration reined in volatility for part of the fourth quarter, only to give way to a 3% rally in the last two weeks of the year following the December expiration, he said.”All that positive gamma is really crunching the market,” Kochuba said. “The lid has been kept on volatility.” More

  • in

    Argentina’s new government devalues peso and cuts spending to jolt economy

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.Argentina’s new libertarian government will devalue the peso by about half, slash public spending and reduce energy and transport subsidies as it battles to contain an economic crisis and spiralling inflation.Economy Minister Luis Caputo gave a summary of the measures in a televised message on Tuesday, in which dwelled at length on the South American nation’s dire situation but gave little detail. Transmission of his broadcast was delayed several times, with local media saying the minister was re-recording it, and no news conference was held afterwards.“If we carry on as we are, we will have hyperinflation,” Caputo said in the address. Prices are expected to rise more than 200 per cent this calendar year. “Out of the last 123 years, Argentina ran a fiscal deficit in 113 . . . we have come to solve the addiction to fiscal deficits,” he added.The broadcast marked the first major announcement by President Javier Milei’s government since it took office on Sunday. Milei, a self-styled “anarcho-capitalist” and former TV pundit, promised to take a “chainsaw” to Argentina’s state as part of radical shock therapy. Caputo said the new government would move the official exchange rate to 800 to the dollar from levels just below 400 last week. Banks had already anticipated a sharp devaluation, but the new official level for the dollar was still some way below the black market rate of 1,045 on Tuesday.Federal budget transfers to the provinces would be cut to a minimum and all new public works projects halted, the minister said. “There is no more money,” he repeated. Caputo also announced a temporary rise in taxes on imports but promised to scrap the existing system of government permits for imports. Export taxes, which are hated by Argentina’s powerful farming lobby, will be removed once the economic emergency is over.To offset the impact of the cuts on the more than 40 per cent of Argentines living in poverty, Caputo said the value of the government-provided food card would rise by 50 per cent and child benefits would double. The budget for one of Argentina’s largest welfare programmes, Potenciar Trabajo, would be frozen at 2023 levels.The IMF, which is owed $43bn by Argentina, quickly welcomed the package. “These bold initial actions aim to significantly improve public finances in a manner that protects the most vulnerable in society and strengthen the foreign exchange regime,” the Washington-based lender said. Nicolás Dujovne, who served as economy minister from 2017-19 during the centre-right government of Mauricio Macri, noted the lack of timelines in Caputo’s announcement and said many details were still missing. “There are still no elements which would allow us to know at what pace we are moving towards a balanced budget and whether in fact we are moving towards a balanced budget,” he said.Fernando Marull, founder of Buenos Aires-based economic consultancy FMyA, said the package was “aggressive on fiscal and exchange rate policy”. The cuts target spending areas that make up 4.2 percentage points of gross domestic product, though he cautioned that in the absence of more detail the final impact was unclear.Although Milei cultivated an eccentric and flamboyant image on the campaign trail, promising to close the central bank and scrap the peso for the US dollar, he has moderated his stance dramatically since winning the election last month.Investors and diplomats who were initially alarmed by Milei’s radical positions have warmed to his new image, hoping he can build a broad political alliance to get his economic reform measures through congress, where his party has only a small minority of seats. More

  • in

    Dollar on back foot as traders look to Fed for cut timing clues

    TOKYO (Reuters) – The dollar remained on the back foot versus major rivals on Wednesday, as traders braced for the conclusion of a Federal Reserve policy meeting and clues on when the U.S. central bank will begin cutting interest rates.The U.S. currency edged lower to 145.385 yen in early Asian trading, adding to its 0.5% loss from the previous session. It was also down slightly against the euro at $1.0798, after losing about 0.28% on Tuesday. The dollar index – which gauges the dollar against the euro, yen and four other counterparts – was steady at 103.82 following a 0.31% drop overnight.Fed officials give updated economic and interest rate projections later in the day – following a meeting where analysts and investors expect rates to stay on hold – and investors will focus on how they see the economy holding up.In particular, investors will be watching to see if Fed Chair Jerome Powell pushes back against the prospect of interest rate cuts in the first half of 2024.Recent signs have been for a soft landing, but data overnight showed consumer prices unexpectedly rising in November.Traders currently price in a quarter point rate cut in May.”The Fed hasn’t said they are cutting rates, they have said they are data dependent, but the market is already acting like rate cuts are baked in,” said James Kniveton, senior corporate FX dealer at Convera.”If the Fed does push back tonight on those rate cut expectations, the dollar index may have an opportunity move back into the October range of 105-107.”Later this week the European Central Bank, Bank of England, Norges Bank and the Swiss National Bank also decide policy, with Norway considered the only one which could potentially raise rates. There is also a risk the SNB could dial back its support for the franc in FX markets.The Bank of Japan’s policy meeting comes next week, and the yen has been volatile on speculation the central bank is drawing close to ending negative rate policy. Building hopes that this may occur next Tuesday were dashed after Bloomberg reported this week that BOJ officials see little need to rush to the exit.The antipodean currencies ticked up against the dollar, with the Aussie adding 0.09% to $0.6565, and New Zealand’s currency rose 0.07% to $0.6139.Meanwhile, leading cryptocurrency bitcoin continued to consolidate around $41,350 after pulling back from the highest since April 2022 at $44,729, reached on Friday. More

  • in

    Biden tells Ukraine’s Zelenskiy: Don’t give up hope

    “We’re going to stay at your side,” Biden told Zelenskiy. Earlier on Tuesday, Biden urged the U.S. Congress to fund additional aid before leaving for its holiday recess and also announced $200 million in separate military assistance for Ukraine. Zelenskiy told Biden his country was becoming less dependent on aid and appreciated U.S. help in boosting its air defenses, adding that Kyiv was strong enough to win its war against Moscow. He also said he wanted to discuss Ukrainian integration with the European Union with Biden. The two leaders were scheduled to hold a joint news conference after their meeting, which followed Zelenskiy’s visit to U.S. lawmakers on Capitol Hill. More