Bond Traders Favor Half-Point Cut in Fed’s ‘Coin Flip’ Decision

(Bloomberg) — Bond traders are favoring bets the Federal Reserve will kick off its interest-rate cutting cycle with a half-point move this week as debate rages on over whether officials can pull off a rare soft landing.

Most Read from Bloomberg

The market-implied odds that policymakers announce a 50-basis-point rate reduction were around 55% on Tuesday after retail sales data unexpectedly rose in August, suggesting resilience among US consumers. That keeps uncertainty in financial markets high going into the Fed’s September policy decision on Wednesday.

“The decision is essentially a coin flip,” Blerina Uruci, chief US economist at T. Rowe Price, told Bloomberg Television. “It is possible we get a 50-basis-point cut tomorrow,” and the Fed’s summary of economic projections “will probably show the dot plot has 100 basis points worth of cuts for the year as a whole.”

Debate over the size of the Fed’s first rate cut in four years has been dominating financial markets for months, fueled by economic reports and speeches by Fed officials. Traders have fully priced in a quarter-point move, and have in recent days piled into bets on a larger, 50-basis-point move as speculation mounted over the Fed’s decision.

Treasuries have been rallying in anticipation of rate cuts, with a Bloomberg gauge of returns on course for a fifth-straight month of gains. That would mark the index’s best monthly winning streak since 2010. The advance has pressured yields lower, with nearly the entire curve — aside from the 20-year bond — trading below 4% on Tuesday.

Investor demand was soft for a $13 billion 20-year bond auction at 1 p.m. New York time. The auction result was 4.039%, two basis points higher than its yield at the bidding deadline, a sign of that interest fell short of expectations. Long-maturity yields eked out new session highs afterward.

Searching for Clues

Earlier Tuesday, US August retail sales unexpectedly rose, supported by online purchases that masked more mixed results at other merchants, and August industrial production exceeded expectations.

The data weighed on Treasuries, and in early afternoon trade in New York, the two-year yield was higher by four basis points at 3.60%, the 10-year by three basis points at 3.65%. The dollar gained against most of its Group-of-10 currency peers.

What Bloomberg strategists say…

“Retail sales for August beat expectations in aggregate. That’s in line with robust leading data, but is incommensurate with the 50-basis-point interest-rate cut the market still sees as more likely than not that the Federal Reserve will deliver this week.”

— Simon White, Markets Live macro strategist

The swaps market, though, is still pricing in some 76 basis points worth of easing by the November meeting, implying one half-point move over the next two decisions.

Over the next 12 months, traders have priced in 243 basis points of easing, a pace of cuts that if realized would bring Fed policy down toward 3%.

“There’s a recipe for a back up in yields,” as the market has priced in a ton of easing, Ashok Bhatia, deputy co-chief investment officer at Neuberger Berman Group, told Bloomberg Television. “It will be hard for the Fed to deliver all of that based on what we know now.”

–With assistance from Liz Capo McCormick.

(Adds 20-year auction result, updates prices throughout.)

Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek

©2024 Bloomberg L.P.

  • Related Posts

    Economists See Stubborn Inflation, Gradual Fed Rate-Cut Tempo

    News Today's news US Politics World Tech Reviews and deals Audio Computing Gaming Health Home Phones Science TVs Climate change Health Science 2024 election Originals The 360 Newsletters Life Health…

    The rising price of paying the national debt is a risk for Trump’s promises on growth and inflation

    News Today's news US Politics World Tech Reviews and deals Audio Computing Gaming Health Home Phones Science TVs Climate change Health Science 2024 election Originals The 360 Newsletters Life Health…

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    You Missed

    Unlike a Fine Wine, Tax Issues Do Not Get Better with Age

    • By admin
    • November 24, 2024
    • 1 views
    Unlike a Fine Wine, Tax Issues Do Not Get Better with Age

    Economists See Stubborn Inflation, Gradual Fed Rate-Cut Tempo

    • By admin
    • November 24, 2024
    • 2 views
    Economists See Stubborn Inflation, Gradual Fed Rate-Cut Tempo

    The rising price of paying the national debt is a risk for Trump’s promises on growth and inflation

    • By admin
    • November 24, 2024
    • 1 views
    The rising price of paying the national debt is a risk for Trump’s promises on growth and inflation

    Fed’s Pandemic Program to Help Main Street Is Now a Burden for Businesses

    • By admin
    • November 24, 2024
    • 4 views
    Fed’s Pandemic Program to Help Main Street Is Now a Burden for Businesses

    Iran Braces for Trump Reset With Economy Buckling From Sanctions

    • By admin
    • November 24, 2024
    • 4 views
    Iran Braces for Trump Reset With Economy Buckling From Sanctions

    German giant Bosch becomes latest firm to give employees unwanted 4-day week as economy falters

    • By admin
    • November 24, 2024
    • 3 views
    German giant Bosch becomes latest firm to give employees unwanted 4-day week as economy falters