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Slower US rate hikes could help ‘buy time’, allow businesses to plan better

This video interview is owned by Channel News Asia, and the original source can be found at https://youtu.be/U_Im05ClsN0

The United States Federal Reserve’s plan to ease its pace of interest rate hikes as soon as December would bring some relief for markets concerned about the central bank overtightening too quickly, Mr. Tony Nash, founder and chief executive of data analytics firm Complete Intelligence, told CNA’s Asia First.

Transcript

CNA: Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell has signaled policymakers could slow interest rate increases starting this month. That sets the stage for a possible to downshift to a 50bps rate hike when Fed officials gather again in two weeks.

Powell: Monetary policy affects the economy and inflation with uncertain lags. And the full effects of our rapid tightening so far are yet to be felt.

Thus it makes sense to moderate the pace of our rate increases as we approach the level of restraint that will be sufficient to bring inflation down. The time for moderating the pace of rate increases may come as soon as the December meeting.

CNA: But it isn’t quite a dovish turn. The U.S Central Bank Chief also stressed that they have a long way to go in restoring price stability despite some promising developments.

Mr. Powell warns against reading too much into one month of inflation data saying that the FED has yet to see clear progress on that front. In order to gain control of inflation, the Fed chair says the American labor market also has to loosen up to reduce upward pressure on wages. Job gains in the country remain high at nearly 300,000 positions per month and borrowing costs are likely to remain restrictive for some time to tamp down rapid price surges.

This is where U.S interest rates stand after an unprecedented series of four 75 bps rate hikes. Policymakers projected earlier that this could go as high as 4.6 percent but Powell says they will likely need to keep lifting rates more and go beyond that level until the inflation fight is done.

The less hawkish tone from Powell Boyd U.S market stow and the S&P500 erased losses it searched three percent. The Dow gained two percent while the NASDAQ jumped more than 4.4 percent. the 10-year treasury yield also dipped as Bond Traders dialed back their expectations on how high the Fed may push interest rates while the U.S dollar retreated.

Tony Nash is founder and CEO of Complete Intelligence joining us from Houston, Texas for some analysis. Now Tony, just looking at Powell’s comments, the first differs in some way with what the Fed and its officials have been telling us earlier in the year and how we’ll get there fast to try to reach the terminal rate. But now it’s signaling that it will get there slower. What is this going to mean for businesses and consumers in the US?

Tony: I think what it means is we’re going to get to the same destination. It’s just going to take a little bit more time to get there. So the Fed has seen jobs turn around they’ve seen jobs aren’t necessarily slowing but the rate of rise in open jobs is slowing. We’ve seen mortgage rates go up. We’ve seen the rate of inflation rise slowly.

So the Fed is seeing some things that they want and they’re worried about over-tightening too quickly. Because what we’ve seen so far is really just interest rate rises. They really haven’t even started quantitative tightening yet. I mean they’ve done a little bit maybe a couple hundred billion dollars. But they have nine trillion dollars on their books give or take.

They haven’t even started QT yet. And they’re starting to see inflation and some of these pressures on markets at least slowed down a little bit. So I think they’re saying “hey guys we’re still going to get to a terminal rate of five percent or five and a half percent but we’re going gonna slow it down from here unless we see things accelerate again.”

CNA: When do you think we will actually see that five to five and a half percent?

Tony: You’ll see it in the first quarter. You know if we do say 50bps in December and maybe another 50 in January, we’ll see some 25bps hikes after that but I think what markets the cyber leaf that markets are giving right now is just saying. Okay, we’re not at 100 or 75 in December.

I think that’s a big size that you saw today and you know. It raising at 75bps per meeting just put some real planning challenges in front of operators people, who run companies. So if they slow down that pace and people know we’re still going to get to that 5 to 5.5%, it allows people to plan a little bit more thoughtfully, and a little bit more intelligently.

I think this does relieve some people of the worries of the Fed over-tightening too quickly and it also relieves worries that the Fed is only relying on monetary policy. They’re not relying on interest rates I’m sorry and they’re not relying on quantitative tightening. so the Federal balanced approach sometime in Q1.

CNA: Okay, you also mentioned before in our past conversations, the concern that the market has been having for this week especially since it’s China’s lockdowns and you see these restrictions ending gradually. What is that going to mean for Energy prices and inflation?

We see Energy prices say now they’re what high 70s low 80s somewhere in that range. We do see a rise of say crude oil prices by about 30 percent once China fully opens. We could easily be 110-120 a barrel once China fully opens. And so there will be pressure on global energy markets once China opens. Other commodity prices will see the same because we’re just not seeing the level of consumption in China that we expect.

What we also expect is for Equity markets to turn away from the U.S. and more toward Asia. So the US has attracted a lot of investment over the past year partly because of the strong dollar partly because of kind of a risk-off mentality consolidating in U.S markets. As China opens and there becomes more activity in Asia than we would expect, some of that money to draw down out of the US and go back to Asia.

CNA: Can you look at the jobs market in the US even as we expect this potential pivot towards Asia for stock market investors? The jobs market and the picture on wages there because the ADP data shows that there seems to be a cooling in demand for labor how soon do you think we can see a broadening out to the broader jobs market?

Tony: You would have broader cooling of demand in the jobs market I think, that’s definitely hidden tech. You’ve seen a lot of layoffs in technology over the past say three weeks. And that will cascade out. I don’t necessarily see think that you’ll see that in places like energy, but you will see that in maybe finance, some aspects of financial services. You’ve seen some of that and say mortgage brokers and this sort of thing so you’ll see that in some aspects of financial services. Some aspects of say manufacturing at the edges. but I do think there’s a lot of growth in U.S manufacturing as this reassuring narrative really takes uh gets momentum in North America. And so even though we may shed some manufacturing jobs in one area I think we’ll see growth in manufacturing jobs in other areas.

CNA: Okay, Tony. We’ll leave it there for today. Thanks for sharing your analysis with us. Tony Nash is founder and CEO of Complete Intelligence.

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CNA Asia First: What does the 50bps Fed hike mean for markets?

The full episode was posted at https://www.channelnewsasia.com. It may be removed after a few weeks. This video segment is owned by CNA. 

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell just announced a 50 basis points hike in May. Tony Nash was called in to explain what will happen to markets when this happens.

Show Notes

CNA: Tony Nash joins us for chat now. He’s founder and CEO of Complete Intelligence. So, Tony, we’re getting Powell explicitly saying that a half-point hike is on the table for the May meeting. The Fed, as you said and pointed out during the break, getting really serious about aggressive tightening. How do you think markets are going to have to come to terms with it for the rest of the year?

TN: People say that it’s already priced into markets. It’s not really priced in until it happens. So there is an expectation that certainly May and June will be 50 basis point hikes. But we’re not really sure about July. But again, people will not necessarily price it fully until it happens. And we’ll see a pullback in equities when it happens, certainly in areas like tech. So we’re already seeing Netflix and other tech firms being punished because they’re an expansionary play, as you have say, rate rising and the balance sheet falling. Tech tends to fall as money is tighter.

CNA: Even if we see that half point rate hike each meeting from May, June, July, what’s it going to do to tamp down inflation, given how it is a supply side issue, not so much demand problem now.

TN: Right. What they’re trying to do is destroy demand. So in the early days of inflation, in 2021, it really was because of expansionary monetary policy and all the money that was dumped into economies as it went on. We saw supply chain issues get more complicated. And what we have now is really a supply driven inflation. You just can’t get enough out to markets. Really, the only thing the Fed can do is to try to kill demand and destroy demand. This is why they’re rising so fast, where people see things out of touch so they can’t borrow money to buy that house. They can’t borrow money to buy that car or whatever, because interest rates are rising too fast. That’s how they’ll destroy demand. That’s how they’ll create balance in the market where supply is constrained, particularly out of China. And demand right now is really too high for the supply that we have.

CNA: Okay. With regards to earnings news, you mentioned tech is in trouble, especially with the Netflix sell off. But we also see how Tesla and the Airlines seem to be posting upbeat guidance. How do you think the value lies for the rest of the year, as it’s very difficult now to find a company that hasn’t mentioned rising cost pressures or inflation in their guidance.

TN: Sure. Yeah. Rising costs are hitting everybody, right? And so what people will be looking for is those sectors that they believe can continue to gain value even as, say, consumption goes by the wayside, say, tech consumption, that sort of thing, or as say, the work from home thing, subside with Netflix, those sorts of plays. So continued value, even with rising costs. So who can pass costs on to their subscribers or their customers. So you’re looking at guys like consumer staples, you’re looking at finance. Those sorts of sectors will probably do well. We do expect China generally to do well once Shanghai and the other cities in China open. And once stimulus really starts, we believe that when stimulus in China starts, there will be a deluge of stimulus across China because they have to make things look good in time for that. Q four meeting.

CNA: Do you think that might change soon enough, though, because it looks like it’s unlikely to shift from a zero Covid policy. So we might see that stop start for later parts of the year?

TN: We might. I’m not thinking that they will. I think once they get through this, they’re realizing the pain that they’re causing their own economy, but they’re realizing also the pain that they’re causing the rest of the world. So I think they’ll get through this. They’re gradually open. And once they do open, they’ll likely stay open because the rest of the world is pretty much committed to Covid being endemic and China is really kind of slow to adopt it. Once they adopt it, then the world economy should be humming again, but it’s going to take some time to get back on track.

CNA: All eyes on the Asian giant, Tony, thank you for sharing your announcement with us, Tony Nash of complete intelligence.