As expected, the FOMC yesterday agreed to hike rates by 0.25%. This represents a slowdown relative to the pace of rate increases implemented through most of 2022. Accompanying the decision to hike rates was a sentence confirming the Fed’s intention to continue to shrink its balance sheet. All 12 FOMC members voted for the hike and for continued balance sheet shrinkage.1
This meeting did not include an updated Summary of Economic Projections (SEP) so there was no window on the Fed’s thinking with regards to the economy and the outlook for the fed funds rate. Instead, investors had to rely on the press conference hosted by FOMC Chair Powell to glean information. In that press conference, Powell adopted a hawkish tone, reiterating the need to keep policy tight until the data supports the view that inflation is fully under control. Powell stressed that he expects the fed funds rate to move higher and for the policy stance to remain restrictive “for some time”.
FOMC members, including Chair Powell, are incentivised to continue to talk tough even though there is a large gap between market expectations and the Fed’s own projections for the path of the fed funds rate, as encapsulated in the so-called Dot Plot (Chart 1). Whereas futures markets are pricing in a peak in the fed funds rate at under 5%, the most recent Dot Plot from December indicates that the median FOMC member thinks the fed funds rate will peak at a little over 5%. Moreover, the median FOMC member thinks the fed funds rate will remain unchanged throughout the year once its peak is reached whilst futures markets are pricing in cuts in the second half of the year.