Investors have sharply raised their bets that the U.S. Federal Reserve will hike interest rates by 75 basis points (bps) instead of 50 bps on Wednesday, a shift in expectations that has sparked an extreme selloff across world markets.
Expectations for a 75-bps raise at the June meeting climbed to 89% on Tuesday from just 3.9% a week earlier, according to CME’s Fed watch Tool. On the other hand, expectations of a 50 bps rate increase on Wednesday have faded to 11% from a surefire bet the previous week.
Investors fear that a 75-bps rate hike, which would be the largest since 1994, will negatively affect the valuation of equities, especially technology stocks, and threaten the post- COVID-19 recovery. Monday’s selloff discovered a so-called bear market for the U.S. S&P 500 equity index (.SPX), which lost more than 20% from its latest closing high.
On Tuesday, investors proceeded with selling U.S. stocks as investors prepared for a brutal Fed.
In the Treasuries market on Tuesday, U.S. two-year yields, which are very sensitive to rate expectations, rose to 3.439 percentage points, the largest since November 2007. Benchmark U.S. 10-year yields hit 3.479 percentage points, their highest level since April 2011.
The yield curve between two-year and 10-year notes briefly backtracked on Tuesday as far as 5.4 bps, which usually implies an incoming recession. The curve was last sharper at 4.2 bps.
The Federal Reserve Raised Interest Rate
The Fed concluded its two-day meeting on Wednesday amid data last Friday indicating that U.S. consumer prices had surged at their swiftest pace since 1981.
Data indicated that in the 12 months through May, the U.S. consumer price index (CPI) jumped 8.6 percentage points, the biggest year-on-year increase in almost four decades. The so-called core CPI surged 6.0 percent last month on a year-on-year basis.
Buy Bitcoin NowSome investment banks, including Goldman Sachs, said they currently expected 75-bps hikes in June and July, and then a 50-bps increase in September. TD Securities anticipated the same quantum of rate increases in June and July. At the end of the day, the Federal Reserve increased interest rates by an incredible 0.75%, the highest since 1994.
The U.S. Federal Reserve should grow its Fed Fund rate to 3% on Wednesday, Jeffrey Gundlach, the chief executive officer of DoubleLine Capital said on Twitter late on Tuesday. Mauricio Agudelo, head of fixed income investments at Homestead Funds, stated:
“The market has quickly adjusted rate hike expectations for the next few meetings, including 75 bps each for June and July. In our view, the market is already doing the tightening for the Fed, therefore the Fed must deliver.”