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Key Events In The Coming "Most Important FOMC Decision Ever" Week

Tyler Durden's picture




 

The title does give it away: the only event that everyone will be focusing on this week will be the Fed's announcement and Yellen's press conference on Thursday. Here is what else is on deck.

  • Turning to this week’s calendar now. It’s a fairly quiet start to the week today with just Euro area industrial production and Italian CPI, with no data due out in the US this afternoon.
  • It’s busier on Tuesday however with French and UK CPI (along with RPI and PPI in the latter), followed closely by the Euro area employment and trade data along with the German ZEW survey reading for September. That’s before a bumper data session in the US on Tuesday with retail sales, empire manufacturing, industrial and manufacturing production, capacity utilization and business inventories all due.
  • In Europe on Wednesday all eyes will be on the Euro area CPI print, while UK employment indicators are also expected. In the US the focus will be on the August CPI print in what’s set to be the last important data print prior to the FOMC meeting. Average weekly earnings data and the NAHB housing market index are also due Wednesday.
  • We start in Japan on Thursday with trade data before we get UK retail sales closer to home. Prior to the FOMC decision in the early evening and subsequent Yellen press conference we’ll get US housing starts, building permits, initial jobless claims and Philadelphia Fed business outlook readings ahead of the main event.
  • Ending the week on Friday in Asia will be property prices data out of China. In Europe we’ll get French wage data before the conference board leading indicators out of the US in the afternoon.

And here is BofA's preview of the main event:

Game Day Decision

 

As we have noted, the September FOMC meeting remains a very close call. Our base case is that the Fed begins a very gradual normalization process by hiking 25bp in response to the cumulative improvement in the economy, particularly the labor market. However, the decision likely will depend on market conditions into the September 16 and 17 meeting. Thus, recent financial market volatility and global growth uncertainties could lead the FOMC to temporarily postpone hiking. In that case, we would expect the Committee to keep the October meeting “live” as a potential date for liftoff.

 

If September is a go

 

In our base case the FOMC hikes in September, citing the improvement in the outlook and narrowing slack. The expectation of both a tightening labor market and fading global disinflationary factors should allow the Committee to be “reasonably confident” that inflation will gradually return to target. Although the Committee should note that significant accommodation remains after the first hike, we don't expect an especially dovish message in conjunction with liftoff: the Fed wouldn't starting hiking if it didn't think the economy was likely to continue to improve and warrant subsequent rate increases over time. This will not be a “one-and-done” hiking cycle. We see a decent chance that Chicago’s Evans would dissent on a September rate hike.

 

Separating policy from plumbing

 

If the Fed raises rates in September, it will also release an “implementation note” as laid out in the June minutes. This document will contain the domestic policy directive to the Desk in New York. Importantly, it could be updated between meetings to allow for changes in the use of various tools to support the Committee's objectives without being erroneously interpreted as a change in policy stance.

 

If September is a pass

 

We do see a significant chance that the FOMC will take a tactical decision not to hike in September, should market stress remain elevated. In this case, we would expect the FOMC to note that economic conditions could soon warrant starting to scale back some of the extraordinary accommodation in place — perhaps within the next few meetings — but that market or international factors justify caution at this time. In this event, we would expect that October would very much remain an option for hiking rates. The FOMC could convene a press conference on short notice, or could pre-announce one or more press conferences at future meetings during the September one. There is some chance that Richmond’s Lacker dissents in the absence of a September hike.

Finally, here is the summary table:

Source: Bank of America, Deutsche Bank

 

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Mon, 09/14/2015 - 09:39 | 6545736 LawsofPhysics
LawsofPhysics's picture

If "everything is awesome", as the meme has been for quite a while, then rates must go up, even token amount, period.

Why?  Simple.  "Full faith and credit"...

No more faith, means no more credit for you!!!

Mon, 09/14/2015 - 09:53 | 6545797 Four chan
Four chan's picture

what time will the rate info be leaked to goldman sachs this time?

Mon, 09/14/2015 - 11:13 | 6546179 Zero-Hegemon
Zero-Hegemon's picture

My guess: 2 PM Wednesday, enough time to tweak the algos before the Thursday close

Mon, 09/14/2015 - 14:31 | 6547234 The Gladiator
The Gladiator's picture

Do you mean what time will Goldman leak the info to Yellen?

Mon, 09/14/2015 - 11:57 | 6546391 xtop23
xtop23's picture

This really is a non issue quite honestly. The "most important" meme is ridiculous.

Perhaps in the short term, there is volitility that can be played ..... but long term?

Anyone with a functioning neuron knows where this is going.

The FED is completely boxed in and there is no turning back. We are at the Keynesian end point. For all intents and purposes, we are already doing NIRP.

Mon, 09/14/2015 - 09:40 | 6545742 buzzsaw99
buzzsaw99's picture

:yawn:

Mon, 09/14/2015 - 09:41 | 6545748 kliguy38
kliguy38's picture

no its not.......they'll sit tight or raise .....either way its a farce......you're in a primary bear and they will do QE4

Mon, 09/14/2015 - 09:41 | 6545750 buzzsaw99
buzzsaw99's picture

<-- there will be MOAR

<-- the maggots drink your MILKSHAKE

Mon, 09/14/2015 - 09:44 | 6545759 kingvaclav
kingvaclav's picture

Notable Events as Wingnut September Commences

http://winteractionables.com/?p=25099

Mon, 09/14/2015 - 09:58 | 6545819 papa_lazarou
papa_lazarou's picture

Yes, that's right folks, tune in for the special SHIMITA Episode of FOMC. Yellen's gonna get her cock out!

Mon, 09/14/2015 - 10:02 | 6545843 Zero-Hegemon
Zero-Hegemon's picture

I'd rather be sniffing gasoline fumes Thursday morning

Mon, 09/14/2015 - 10:05 | 6545859 Hubbs
Hubbs's picture

Yeah. Talk about the Crying Game!

Mon, 09/14/2015 - 10:00 | 6545820 Zero-Hegemon
Zero-Hegemon's picture

This is all a farce, squid futures are going up no matter what

Mon, 09/14/2015 - 10:04 | 6545854 Hubbs
Hubbs's picture

Most important decision by FED ever? Nah. It was when they decided to lower interest rates in the first place to bail out the housing debacle.

Mon, 09/14/2015 - 10:13 | 6545894 aleph0
aleph0's picture

"Most Important FOMC Decision Ever"  .... as per EVERY MONTH

Mon, 09/14/2015 - 13:17 | 6546744 silentboom
silentboom's picture

Behold our "free markets" where everyone analyzes every syllable of a central planner.

Mon, 09/14/2015 - 14:55 | 6547360 TallDave
TallDave's picture

Historically markets obsessing over tiny nuances in monetary policy is unusual, except when money is too tight.

Mon, 09/14/2015 - 12:07 | 6546445 zrussell
zrussell's picture

I was adamant there would be no increase. I was wrong:

 

.0025%

Mon, 09/14/2015 - 14:57 | 6547347 TallDave
TallDave's picture

Recession is coming.

The Fed will need to loosen to keep the U.S. on a reasonable NGDP trend.  If they screw it up like they did in 2008-9 by worrying too much about inflation, the consequences will again be dire.

There will be enormous pressure to spend (waste) our taxes on fiscal stimulus.  There is no such thing as a liquidity trap.  Central banks can ALWAYS inflate.  Rates are low, but only because expectations for returns and inflation are low.  The Fed will need another round of QE, but historically CBs owning a lot of assets has not been unusual.  

They should just adopt an NGDP trend target of say 5%, then the markets will know what to expect and many of the problems will become self-solving.

Beware tight monetary policy! (yes even at low nominal rates)  It's how we got FDR, the ChiComs, and Barack Obama.

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