Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.
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Good morning. I assume that clever companies with bad news to share issue stealthy news releases at 2.35pm on Fed meeting days, knowing that all the financial journalists will be dialled into the Jay Powell show. Let us know if we missed anything juicy yesterday: robert.armstrong@ft.com and aiden.reiter@ft.com.
50 basis points, followed by nothing
Headlines were flashed; pundits smeared on make-up and appeared on cable TV; side wagers proliferated; column inches stretched to the moon; analyst notes accumulated in teetering piles; social media lit up like a video game. And in the end the market was hilariously unimpressed. We got our big-boy 50bp cut, and equities, bonds and currencies all shrugged contemptuously, in what appeared to be a deliberate effort to humiliate the financial punditocracy.
This indifference was not just funny. It was also a fitting end to the will-it-be-25-or-will-it-be-50 kerfuffle. As soon as the Fed had decisively signalled its pivot to cutting, what mattered most was not pace, but destination. A quarter-point difference to a single short-term interest rate is, in isolation, of little significance to the wider economy. What matters about the size of a particular cut at a particular time is what it signals about the central bank’s extended journey: where it thinks rates need to be, and when it thinks it needs to get there.
Which brings us to the neutral rate (or r*, if you like jargon): the unobservable level of rates that is consistent with full employment and low inflation. “We know it only by its works,” Chair Powell likes to say, misquoting the gospel of Matthew. He said it twice at his press conference yesterday. You’ve fallen below the neutral rate when inflation leaps; you’ve risen above it when risk assets wilt and unemployment jumps. In between, you are walking in the dark, speculating about when you might fall off a ledge or, alternately, hit your head. Central bankers generally can’t stand still, either. Economies have momentum, and policy works with a lag. The Fed must make an estimate and stumble towards it.
The Fed’s current estimate for the neutral rate is 2.9 per cent, according to its summary of economic projections, up a tenth of a percentage point from the last SEP in June. This may not sound like much of a change, but if you look over a slightly longer timeframe, the Fed has shifted its view considerably: