HALISTER1: RESEARCH ROUNDUP: FOMC Statement May Point to December Rate Hike

RESEARCH ROUNDUP: FOMC Statement May Point to December Rate Hike

(Bloomberg) -- (Adds Bloomberg Intelligence, RBS, and TD to item that moved on Oct. 28.)
  • FOMC will likely keep rates on hold Wednesday, while possibly suggesting a forthcoming move at its Dec. 13-14 gathering, based on published research from economists and strategists.
  • Credit Suisse and Morgan Stanley move their calls for a hike forward to December; Credit Suisse previously saw a delay until May, Morgan Stanley most recently expected no increase through 2017
  • Market-implied probabilities stand at ~14.5% for a rate increase in November and ~70% for December; fed funds futures not fully pricing next rate increase until ~2Q 2017
  • Barclays (Michael Gapen, others)
    • FOMC’s goal at Nov. 1-2 meeting is to signal comfort with data on economy/inflation, while not appearing to pre-commit itself to action
    • Policy makers won’t send strong signal about December since market pricing is already consistent with action before year-end
    • MORE
  • Bloomberg Intelligence (Carl Riccadonna, Yelena Shulyatyeva)
    • Policy makers are on a glide path toward December hike, barring significant economic shock; should use “blunt” guidance
    • No change in fed funds rate for now from 0.25%-0.50%; statement should say economic activity has picked up from 1H
    • MORE
  • BNP (Paul Mortimer-Lee, others)
    • FOMC to make small refinements to statement, “edging closer to a hike”
    • Policy makers to acknowledge increase in inflation, further progress toward achieving balanced risks
    • Case for a hike continues to strengthen
    • MORE
  • BofA-Merrill (Michelle Meyer, strategist Ian Gordon)
    • Look for language on balance of risks that conveys Fed officials have become “incrementally more comfortable” with near-term hike than they were in September
    • Fed unlikely to explicitly mention possibility of December hike to avoid setting precedent of “such strong signaling”
    • Nov. 1-2 meeting is a “placeholder” to signal December hike
    • MORE
  • Capital Economics (Paul Ashworth)
    • Not ruling out a “surprise” hike in November, even though Fed will probably wait until December
    • Likely wouldn’t require much to persuade Fed “centrists” to join hawks and support a rate increase
    • Fed may have enough confidence now to act ahead of presidential election
    • MORE
  • Credit Suisse (James Sweeney, others)
    • Markets have accepted idea of a December hike, giving Fed room to move
    • Credit Suisse now expects Fed to lift rates by 25bps in December, compared with prior forecast of May
    • Move in December isn’t a done deal; result of Nov. 8 presidential elections will loom at FOMC deliberations
    • MORE
  • Deutsche Bank (Joseph Lavorgna, others)
    • Fed to “more strongly” signal intent to raise rates; probability is “high” that policy makers act in December
    • Would take “substantial” deterioration in data, financial conditions for Fed to “remain on sidelines at this point”
    • MORE
  • JPMorgan (Michael Feroli)
    • FOMC’s meeting should be “bit of a kabuki dance”
    • Statement could signal intent to move in December by indicating that policy makers are only looking for “some” further progress
    • “Widely understood” that it would be treacherous for Fed to hike just before election
    • MORE
  • Market Securities (Christophe Barraud)
    • Fed to note easing risks, upgrade inflation; policy makers looking to prepare investors for an interest rate increase in December
    • Near-term risks to outlook should be characterized as “nearly balanced” or “balanced”
    • MORE
  • Mizuho (Steven Ricchiuto)
    • FOMC will signal intent to hike by year-end in statement by focusing on labor market, 3Q GDP bounce
    • Statement is likely to flatten curve as 2-year note moves toward 1%
    • MORE
  • Morgan Stanley (Ellen Zentner, others)
    • Morgan Stanley changes call, now sees Fed hike in December; had most recently seen no hikes through 2017
    • October jobs report to “all but solidify a December hike”
    • FOMC to release “benign” statement, saying economy is expanding at moderate pace with solid job gains
    • MORE
  • RBC (Tom Porcelli, others)
    • Officials are “falling in line behind a December move”
    • Language in statement won’t matter much given heightened market-implied odds of a December hike
    • Fed doves favor vague language to allow for flexibility
    • MORE
  • RBS (Brian Daingerfield, others)
    • Unlikely FOMC will add guidance similar to that of October 2015 statement, as market has already priced “high chance” of December rate hike
    • Current pricing for December reduces need to use language to “pull forward expectations”
    • MORE
  • Standard Chartered (Thomas Costerg)
    • FOMC isn’t likely to give guidance on December; such guidance would be a “hawkish surprise”
    • Little change seen in statement vs September; Fed is probably comfortable with current messaging
    • MORE
  • TD (Strategists)
    • Fed to slightly upgrade statement, give no explicit flag about December
    • Statement should reflect improvement in economic conditions given 3Q growth rebound, suggest all risks have improved
    • Could also acknowledge case for hike has strengthened “without nailing down” how much more policy makers need to see
    • MORE
Alert: HALISTER1
Source: BFW (Bloomberg First Word)

People
Brian Daingerfield (RBS Securities Inc)
Christophe Barraud (Kyte Group Ltd/The)
Ellen Zentner (Morgan Stanley)
Ian Gordon (Bank of America Corp)
James Sweeney (Credit Suisse Group AG)

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UUID: 7947283

HALISTER1: U.S. ECO PREVIEW: ADP Employment Due Report in 5 Minutes

U.S. ECO PREVIEW: ADP Employment Due Report in 5 Minutes

(Bloomberg) -- Private payrolls, as tracked by ADP National Employment Report, seen increasing by 165k in Oct. after rising 154k in Sept. (forecast range 130k to 190k); report is based on data from businesses with almost 24m workers on combined payrolls.
  • “While job growth has moderated throughout the year, it is not a discouraging signal at the point in the business cycle when the economy operates near full-employment": Bloomberg Insight
Alert: HALISTER1
Source: BFW (Bloomberg First Word)

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UUID: 7947283

HALISTER1: Changing EU Vote Weightings May Boost Nordic Skepticism: Goldman

Changing EU Vote Weightings May Boost Nordic Skepticism: Goldman

(Bloomberg) -- The U.K. leaving the EU will change the relative weights of the remaining EU member countries in the region’s institutions, particularly the Council of the European Union, Goldman Sachs analyst Dirk Schumacher writes in client note.
  • While the voting share of Germany, the U.K., France, the Netherlands, Sweden, Denmark and Finland is currently 36.1%, without the U.K. the share could fall to 26.8%
    • That could mean a higher probability of measures being pushed through by a Latin majority
  • There may also be an implicit risk that the ‘loss’ of the U.K. as a traditional coalition partner in EU voting may reinforce lingering skepticism in Sweden and Denmark
Alert: HALISTER1
Source: BFW (Bloomberg First Word)

People
Dirk Schumacher (Goldman Sachs Group Inc/The)

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UUID: 7947283