Miracle on 20th Street

Markets cheered a “dovish” December Federal Reserve meeting, seen as an early gift to investors. But has the battle against inflation been won? Franklin Templeton Fixed Income CIO Sonal Desai weighs in.

The press conference following the December Federal Reserve (Fed) meeting raises one interesting question: Why did Fed Chairman Jerome Powell feel it necessary to supercharge an already strong financial markets rally?

Reassuring US inflation data had already bolstered market bullishness going into the meeting, with a significant upswing in equity prices and 10-year Treasury yields down a full percentage point after peaking at nearly 5% in mid-October. Against this background, the very strong bullish moves during the Fed meeting and in its immediate aftermath show that Powell’s statements were a lot more dovish than expected. Indeed, most analyst comments are playing on the theme of an early holiday gift to investors.

A majority of analysts and investors clearly expected Powell to push back against bolstered expectations of early interest-rate cuts. But in the press question-and-answer session following the monetary policy meeting, Powell seemed to brush this off, arguing that since markets had seesawed so wildly in the past year, the Fed would be better off focusing on its job and ignoring market moves.

While some frustration with market volatility is understandable, ignoring the economic impact of financial conditions seems a rather odd development. Just over a month ago, Powell noted that a market-driven tightening in financial conditions was doing some of the Fed’s job in fighting inflation. The same logic implies that the strong market rally ahead of the December meeting had offset a significant portion of the Fed’s monetary tightening effort. Yet, Powell decided to brush it off. This is remarkable, since financial conditions are now back at the June 2022 level, when policy rates were just 1.75%.

Financial Conditions Have Eased Back to June-2022 levels