© Reuters. Four Fed Hikes May Be Just the Start as Traders Lift Rate Bets
(Bloomberg) — The drumbeat for the Federal Reserve to implement four quarter-point interest-rate hikes this year is growing — and with the pace that markets have been moving, there’s a possibility that traders soon look to protect themselves against the risk of even faster policy tightening.
Swaps are already suggesting that the central bank’s target will be 88 basis points higher by the end of this year — seen by many as a sign the market is baking in three hikes, plus the possibility of a fourth in 2022 — and momentum is building for the first increase to take place as soon as March. With major U.S. inflation data ahead this week, as well as testimony from top Fed officials, it could be just the beginning of a bigger repricing.
“It’s quite possible that the Fed is forced to be more aggressive in this cycle,” said Lou Crandall, chief economist at Wrightson ICAP (LON:NXGN). “You could see wage inflation numbers that require a more aggressive policy response.”
It’s a shift that’s happened with remarkable speed. Heading into the final stretch of 2021, the prospect of a March hike was close to a coin flip, but such an outcome is now close to fully priced in. The 10-year Treasury yields, meanwhile, were closer to 1.5%, a quarter point below current levels.
And that’s simply the market’s center of gravity. While three-to-four hikes for 2022 is priced in on average, some in the market are betting on less tightening and others more. As the average tightening predicted by market prices climbs closer to a full percentage point, that suggests some traders could be hedging against the risk of five or even six increases.
To be sure, the bulk of derivative-market activity suggests investors are currently making wagers either side of the central scenario, but it is a risk that has potential to grow, especially if inflation heats up.
Rate hike premium is being added at the margin out to 2024. Option traders are flagging the prospect of eight quarter-point rate hikes by early 2024, up from earlier expectations of around six. Should Fed officials this week decline to walk back the recent message about tackling inflation pressures — and there are plenty of opportunities for them to do so — that tightening momentum in options could extend. A hotter-than-expected consumer-price inflation number also has potential to add fuel to the move.
So if the Fed does fire the starter’s pistol in March — and the inflation situation warrants — the four rate increases that the likes of Goldman Sachs Group Inc (NYSE:GS). and JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE:JPM) are now forecasting could be just the beginning. The bond market is alert to the idea that every Fed meeting this year from March onward — a total of seven — is potentially live in terms of delivering a rate hike or providing details about the pace of balance-sheet changes.
Of course, one important consideration for traders assessing the probability of more than four rate hikes for 2022 is whether the Fed’s focus on shrinking its near $9 trillion balance sheet later this year will mitigate the need for raising its key overnight borrowing rate at a much faster pace.
But some think the Fed has little choice but to become more hawkish. Former New York Fed President Bill Dudley said as wage growth likely spurs consumer inflation, “the Fed will have to respond by taking interest rates above neutral well before the end of 2024.”
That said, it’s only the second week of 2022, there’s a long way to go until even the March meeting, and the rate being targeted by the Fed officially is still very much tethered close to zero — for now.
©2022 Bloomberg L.P.
Source: Investing.com