Press "Enter" to skip to content

Tag: interest rates

Powell: Hope for a ‘Fed Pivot’ at Your Peril

The following is an amended version of the Nov. 3 Daily Contrarian. This briefing and accompanying podcast are released to premium subscribers each market day morning by 0700. To subscribe, visit our Substack or Supercast.

Stocks cratered yesterday after comments from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell that dashed hopes of a ‘Fed pivot.’ It was at least the second time this year that Powell has popped the ‘hopeium’ bubble; at Jackson Hole in August, his succinct speech caused a similar sell-off.

Weirdly, this month’s Federal Open Market Committee meeting got off to a bullish start. The Fed raised interest rates by 75 basis points as expected, but added new language to the policy statement, that it would take into account “cumulative tightening of monetary policy, the lags with which monetary policy affects economic activity and inflation, and economic and financial developments.”

Jerome Powell quote: "It is very premature to be thinking about pausing"
Source: Author via IMGflip.com

Investors initially took this wordy statement as the long-awaited ‘pivot’ signal and bid up stocks. That lasted for about an hour until about halfway through Powell’s ensuing press conference when he announced it was “very premature to be thinking” about pausing rate hikes.

“People when they hear ‘lags’ think about a pause,” Powell said, an apparent direct reference to the new sentence in the policy statement. “It is very premature, in my view, to think about or be talking about pausing our rate hikes,“ he added. “We have a ways to go.”

Hopeium: A Helluva Drug

Investors have been playing a game of chicken with the Fed for some time, periodically acting like a pivot is imminent despite (let’s face it) little evidence. It seems whenever these hopes get too pronounced and stocks start rallying for real that Jay Powell comes out and dashes all hopes. That was certainly the story at Jackson Hole. The scene repeated itself yesterday.

Will investors learn from this? Will they now take Powell by his word that things need to ‘break’ in the economy before there can be any progress on inflation?

Probably pretty unlikely.

At least we now know exactly how the scene will unfold: Some dovish Fed officials will make public comments about pivoting or ‘stepping down’ and the market will rally. It will be helped along by commentary from ‘Fed watchers’ on the sell side (or in asset management. Cough, Blackrock). The rally will intensify, then Powell will come out and kill it again.

The only way we can realistically hope for a Fed pivot is if inflation starts to ease. That isn’t happening yet. Nobody knows when it will. Most guesses on this have so far proved wide of the mark. A reminder to watch the data, not the commentary.

Leave a Comment

There’s Still Time to Hedge Tail Risk — At Least for Stocks: Kris Sidial (Szn 4, Ep. 29)

Kris Sidial of The Ambrus Group joins the podcast to discuss tail-risk hedging: how it works, why it’s important, and how investors can still take advantage of volatility mispricings to protect themselves against further downside — at least in stocks.

Content Highlights

  • What is tail risk hedging? (3:19);
  • Traditional hedges haven’t worked, starting with the 60:40 approach. How might investors hedge stock and bond exposure? (6:15);
  • There are numerous options for investors to protect against downturns. But it’s not always as easy as buying put contracts on indexes (8:24);
  • Variance swaps, one way to compound returns on movements in volatility (10:25);
  • Thoughts on UK pensions and what might have caused issues in that segment of the market (15:27);
  • What investors are doing in this environment in terms of tail-risk hedging — there are still opportunities to hedge (20:02);
  • Background on the guest (30:08);
  • Discussion of systemic risk as a result of the layers of options trades and counterparties: “There is a systemic hazard taking place right now in the derivatives market” (39:32);
  • Speaking of risk, what about the regulatory environment? Are regulators asleep at the switch? Reasons to believe Dodd-Frank is perhaps not as effective as people think.. (43:37)
  • Thoughts on cryptocurrencies (50:01).

More About Kris Sidial

Quick Highlights From Our YouTube Channel

Leave a Comment

The Fed’s Inflation Battle Is Doomed to Fail: Fabian Wintersberger (Szn 4, Ep. 28)

Fabian Wintersberger joins the podcast to discuss his views on the economy, inflation, and Fed policy.

Content Highlights

  • The Fed will not succeed at bringing inflation down to 2%. There will be no soft-landing for the economy (2:48);
  • Interest rate hikes will proceed until something breaks in the real economy, forcing the Fed to reverse course (5:04);
  • Bond yields: We haven’t seen the highs yet (8:16);
  • Background on the guest (14:10);
  • The situation in Europe. Central banks have no choice but to follow the Fed higher (16:38);
  • The situation in Wintersberger’s native Austria, which faces an unprecedented winter with dramatically higher energy costs (18:55);
  • Austria has historical ties to Russia, including in its banking sector, where one institution still has business in the country… (23:27).

More About Fabian Wintersberger

Quick Highlight Clip From Our YouTube Channel

Leave a Comment