The Fed meets next week. What can investors expect?
Stocks have just come off a seemingly auspicious week ā but could the Federal Reserveās June meeting dampen the rally?
The S&P 500 Index last week entered a , meaning that it notched a 20% rally from its low in October. The Nasdaq Composite saw its longest streak of weekly gains since November 2019, powered by mega-cap tech stocks that have led the market higher in 2023.
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Moreover, investors appeared calmer than they have in years, after the United States suspended the debt ceiling in time to avoid a default, allowing investors to breathe a sigh of relief. The Cboe Volatility Index, or VIX, last Thursday closed at its lowest level since January 2020. CNNās reached āextreme greedā on Thursday.
The stock marketās next test will be the Fedās meeting on June 13 and June 14. Markets see a roughly 71% probability of a pause, according to the CME FedWatch Tool as of Friday afternoon.
The May Consumer Price Index and Producer Price Index reports, two key inflation prints, are also due on the days that the Fed meets. While these readings, particularly the CPI, are generally seen as key indicators for how the data-dependent central bank will shape its monetary policy, investors are less concerned about how they will impact the Fedās rate decision this time around.
āUnless that number is wildly away from expectations, I donāt think the Fed changes their minds on anything,ā said JJ Kinahan, chief executive of IG North America.
Thatās because Fed officials have that they are likely to skip a hike in June. Thatās different from a pause since it suggests that the central bank could raise rates as soon as July after taking a break this month. Futures traders see a 53% chance of a July hike, though thereās also a roughly 31% chance of a pause that month, as of Friday afternoon.
Because the Fed has made its intentions clear, the rate decision itself is unlikely to move markets, says Karim El Nokali, investment strategist at Schroders. He adds that there are still some factors that could help drive stocks higher next week, such as cool inflation prints or more dovish commentary from Fed Chair Jerome Powell at the post-meeting press conference.
But that also means Fed talk that hints at further tightening could dampen the marketās rally.
āIf the market took it as it is particularly hawkish, that would definitely be an excuse to see a bit of a sell-off here,ā El Nokali said.
Moreover, markets on June 16 are due for a āquadruple witching,ā which is when options and futures on indexes and stocks expire simultaneously.
That could inject some volatility into the market near the end of the week, said Kinahan.
Why is there no alternative safe asset to Treasuries?
While the United States earlier this month avoided breaching the debt ceiling, its close brush with potential economic and financial catastrophe ā along with the possibility of a credit downgrade ā has resurfaced a perennial question: Is there a viable alternative to the quintessential safe asset, U.S. Treasuries?
The short answer, according to most investors, is no.
President Joe Biden on June 3 finally into law a bill suspending the United States' $31.4 trillion debt limit through Jan. 1, 2025, putting to bed weeks of concerns that the nation could default on its debt.
But the United States could still suffer a downgrade to its credit rating, even though it avoided losing its ability to make payments on time. Fitch Ratings earlier this month that it is keeping the country on watch for a potential downgrade by the end of September.
Itās unlikely, however, that the loss of the coveted AAA rating from Fitch would impact Treasuriesā status as the safe assetās poster child. In fact, Treasuries are so irreplaceable as a haven that a credit downgrade could actually spark a rally, said Benjamin Jeffery, vice president of rates strategy at BMO Capital Markets.
While seemingly counterintuitive, thatās in 2011, when the United States nearly defaulted on its debt and Standard & Poorās downgraded Americaās credit rating.
Thatās because investors are conditioned to seek safety during times of market turbulence. Treasuries are perceived globally as one of the worldās most risk-free, if not the most risk-free, assets ā and the United States nearly defaulting on debt has done little to change that.
In other words, āany credit rating movement would be more of an embarrassment to the U.S. than an impact to investors,ā said Patrick Klein, portfolio manager at Franklin Templeton Fixed Income.
Several reasons underscore Treasuriesā pristine reputation, including that no other country has a currency market that is as liquid, large or highly rated as that of the United States.
āThe U.S. government issues something the rest of the world desperately wishes it had,ā Josh Lipsky, senior director of the Atlantic Councilās GeoEconomics Center and former adviser at the International Monetary Fund, wrote in May.
The U.S. government has roughly $31.9 trillion of total public debt outstanding, according to data as of June 8 from the Treasury Department.
While the U.S. government has come close to defaulting on its debt before, itās never actually happened. Moreover, the government is seen as a far more stable entity than a corporation, for instance, since it can impose taxes and take other measures to ensure it doesnāt run out of cash. That makes it an ideal issuer of debt.
Other safe assets exist but pale in comparison to Treasuries. Gold, for example, is a haven prized for its price stability even when the rest of the market experiences volatility.
But the precious metalās prices are beholden to factors that government debt is not, including a supply that is controlled by miners. That makes the market too risky to underpin a financial system in the same way as the U.S. Treasury market, said Olivier dāAssier, head of APAC applied research at Qontigo.
Moreover, Treasuries are denominated by the U.S. dollar, the worldās leading reserve currency ā a position unlikely to be supplanted by another form of exchange such as gold, despite the value that it holds.
āItās not like we all carry around a bunch of gold bars in our pockets to use at the grocery store,ā said George Mateyo, chief investment officer at Key Private Bank.
Up Next
Monday: Federal Reserve Bank of New York Survey of Consumer Expectations.
Tuesday: Consumer Price Index report for May and NFIB small business optimism index. Federal Reserve begins its two-day meeting.
Wednesday: Producer Price Index report for May. Federal Reserve interest rate decision and post-meeting press conference.
Thursday: Retail sales for May, mortgage rates and weekly jobless claims.
Friday: University of Michigan preliminary reading of consumer sentiment in June.