pwshub.com

Fed outsized rate cut draws muted reaction, but calm may not last

By Saqib Iqbal Ahmed, Suzanne McGee and Carolina Mandl

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Investors who anticipated furious market swings following the U.S. Federal Reserve's bumper rate cut saw more of a muted reaction. That may be fleeting.

Traders had been facing high uncertainty as they awaited the expected rate cut on Wednesday, with a split between those expecting 50 basis points and 25 basis points. The Fed cut rates by an unusually large half-percentage-point.

But while market reaction was muted, with stocks and the dollar reversing positions to mostly come full circle, there could be another wave of action. Some referred specifically to bond yields being at risk of spiking higher after rising on Wednesday.

"The calm, I think is not going to last," said Brian Jacobsen, chief economist at Annex Wealth Management, which oversees $5.5 billion in assets. He pointed to a reversal in equities late in the day that could set the market up for weakness in stocks "unless and until we get some data giving us a clear sense of direction."

Jacobsen said the market will be focused on upcoming data such as Thursday's initial jobless claims.

"The Fed clearly is in catch-up mode and trying to make up for lost time with the cut it's just made," Jacobsen said.

There may also be a knock-on effect as the Fed decision ripples through other markets.

"The coming hours could prove dangerous ... with traders exposed to sudden riptides as rate expectations are reinforced in other economies,” said Karl Schamotta, chief market strategist at payments company Corpay, about foreign-exchange markets.

"Aftershocks are likely to continue as positioning-related adjustments play out."

MUTED REACTION

Stock options had priced in a roughly 1.1% swing, up or down, for the S&P 500, according to options analytics service ORATS. But by the close of trading, the index had snapped a seven-day winning streak to finish down 0.29%, reversing earlier gains.

One reason for the muted market reaction on a close-to-close basis has to do with how asset prices moved in the days leading up to the Fed decision, said Sonu Varghese, global macro strategist at Carson Group. Through Tuesday, the Russell 2000 was up 5% over the previous five sessions and the dollar had slipped 0.7%, on expectations for the start of the Fed's long-awaited rate-cutting cycle.

"It's a very silly cliche, 'buy the rumor, sell the news', but that's kind of what happened," said Matt Diczok, head of fixed income strategy at Merrill and Bank of America Private Bank.

On Wednesday, the dollar index initially fell, but recovered to trade up 0.1% at 100.981.

"Since this policy move was mostly telegraphed, there is no outsized move in financial markets," said Jack McIntyre, portfolio manager at Brandywine Global.

Bonds did register a significant move, however, with the 10-year yield spiking by seven basis points on the day, while the 2/10 U.S. Treasury yield curve reached its steepest level since July 2022, after the rate cut, signaling long-term expectations of higher inflation and growth.

Treasury yields, which move inversely to prices, had tumbled to their lowest levels since mid-2023 in the days ahead of the decision.

In a research note, Julian Emanuel, senior managing director at Evercore ISI, recommended positioning for a bounce in yields, and that progress by the Fed on inflation may slow or stall.

Small caps, which initially bounced, ended flat. Traders' initial reaction was to lift the small-caps-focused Russell 2000 index by nearly 1% in the minute immediately after the Fed decision, making for the index's largest one-minute percentage gain in at least three months, according to LSEG data.

Smaller companies typically rely more on borrowing, and lower interest rates cut their financing costs, bolstering their profitability and growth.

"To see the jump in small caps specifically, that's the market buying what the Fed is saying, that they will continue to cut rates next year and that's a potential tailwind to small caps," said Ryan Detrick, chief market strategist at Carson Group.

But the Russell index finished up only 0.04% on the day.

Fed chair Jerome Powell said in the meeting that the rate cut marked a "strong start" to protecting strength in the economy.

Still, the outsized rate cut could be read more alarmingly.

"I do think that there will be a lot of profit-taking for investors that came into the day long equity to play this event and we may very well trade lower as the market continues to wonder what is scaring the Fed that we cannot see," said Matthew Rowe, head of portfolio management and cross-asset strategies at Nomura Capital Management.

(Reporting by Saqib Iqbal Ahmed, Suzanne McGee and Carolina Mandl, additional reporting by Davide Barbuscia and Michelle Price, editing by Megan Davies and Rod Nickel)

Source: finance.yahoo.com

Related stories
1 month ago - (Bloomberg) -- Asian stocks tumbled as sentiment was hit by a triple whammy of a selloff in Japanese equities, a global tech rout and signs of weakness in the US economy. Most Read from BloombergUS Reporter to Be Freed by Russia in Major...
1 month ago - Shares in Donald Trump’s social media company hit their lowest level since it went public in March on the Nasdaq exchange.
5 days ago - “This is a Fed that believes they are behind the curve,” Robert Minter, director of ETF Investment Strategy at abrdn, told Fortune.
1 week ago - The Federal Reserve will lower interest rates by 25 basis points at each of the U.S. central bank's three remaining policy meetings in 2024, according to a majority of economists in a Reuters poll that found only nine of 101 expected a...
1 day ago - SINGAPORE (Reuters) -Bitcoin was the notable mover as it reached for one-month highs on Monday, sustaining its rally after the Federal Reserve's super-sized rate cut last week, while the yen extended its decline in markets thinned by a...
Other stories
46 minutes ago - The bank used options prices to map out the implied moves in the S&P 500 for every day between now and the day after the election.
1 hour ago - Oakmark's Bill Nygren is focused on cheap stocks that repurchase their own shares, he told CNBC.
1 hour ago - WASHINGTON (Reuters) -General Motors and Ford Motor would need to stop importing vehicles to the U.S. from China under a proposed rule cracking down on Chinese software and hardware, a U.S. Commerce Department official told Reuters...
2 hours ago - The business landscape is undergoing a profound transformation, driven by the rapid convergence of data and artificial intelligence. In this era of data and intelligence, companies must prioritize effective data management for AI to...
2 hours ago - (Bloomberg) -- Asian stocks advanced after China’s central bank announced stimulus measures in a bid to reach this year’s economic growth target and stem a selloff in the equity market. Most Read from BloombergUnlocking the Hidden Power...