In perhaps the least anticipated FOMC statement in months – with expectations of no rate-change and normalization on path – all eyes were on inflation/growth wording. Some feared a more dovish Fed might upset the exuberant growth narrative that is embedded into equity valuations (but not the yield curve), but The Fed seemed slightly more positive (and perhaps hawkish) by upgrading the economy from “rising moderately” to “at a solid rate” even if as it cautioned that “Gasoline prices rose in the aftermath of the hurricanes, boosting overall inflation in September; however, inflation for items other than food and energy remained soft.”
As a result of the neutral wording, a December rate hike now appears guaranteed.
The Fed unanimously voted to leave policy unchanged.
Additional highlights:
And nothing from Yellen on Trump or Powellbut he reiterated that “Yellen is excellent.”
The bottom line is that this was a very neutral statement with no surprise, and the three key phrases coming in precisely in line with “neutral” expectations:
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Some initial, kneejerk observations from Stone McCarthy:
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