Thoughts On The U.S. Rate Conundrum

The could be six weeks away from raising rates. The FOMC statement from the end of last month appeared to have lowered the bar of a move. It called the recent improvement in the labor market as “solid” and wanted to see “some” more.   

The Bloomberg consensus increase of 225k increase in the July nonfarm payroll report to be released Friday surely qualifies as “some” improvement, especially if reinforced by other details of the report. Average hourly earnings are expected to return to 2.3% year-over-year, where they were in April and May. This matches the August 2013 high and the July 2011 high, which are the fastest pace since 2009. 

The market is not as convinced as economists are that the Fed will, in fact, raise rates next month. In terms of inflation expectations, the Fed recognizes two distinct signals. The first is market-based measures, which have softened. The second is surveys, which show expectations are steady. For the past several months, the Fed has put more stock in the survey results.  

Similarly in terms of Fed expectations, surveys show a large majority (a little more than  80%) of economists expect a hike in September. One of the most direct market measures, the September Fed funds futures contract, has a slight bias against a hike. 

To avoid confusion, we share our work here. Note that the Fed funds futures contract settles at the average effective Fed funds rate for the month. The average effective rate is adjusted for volume. It has averaged 13 bp for the past 100 sessions. An unbiased assumption is that it continues to average that in the first 17 sessions in September.  

If the Fed were to hike rates 25 bp at the conclusion of the September 16-17 meeting  the unbiased assumption is that the Fed funds would average the middle of the new 25-50 bp range. This would put the average for September at 23.4 bp (17 days at 13 bp plus 13 days at 37 bp divided by 30).  

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