Key themes for the week ahead – US CPI, Fed nomination hearings, and US retail sales.

Last week, the Fed minutes signaled another shift from the FOMC to promote further steps in policy normalization. The timing and conditions for quantitative tightening (QT), or balance sheet runoff, was discussed. There was a flavor of ‘this time is different’ concerning QT (the first QT program ended abruptly in Sep 2019) and would likely start much sooner after rates liftoff than in the prior cycle. The accelerated end to taper was seen as warranted with inflation exceeding forward guidance criteria. There were mixed views on full employment, but it was generally agreed that maximum employment criteria were not yet met, but would be soon. The accelerated end to taper now provides the FOMC with the flexibility for an earlier start to rates lift-off. Markets are pricing a higher probability for a Mar hike.

Later in the week, US non-farm payrolls growth for Dec disappointed. But in the five months to Dec, non-farm payrolls have been revised higher by +730k jobs (compared to the initial number announced from Jul to Nov). Labour market indicators continue to improve. Employment growth remained strong and the employment to population ratio is now 1.6%pts below the pre-pandemic peak. The participation rate was unchanged in Dec but had been revised higher for Nov to 61.9%. The unemployment rate fell below 4% to 3.9% (16yrs+).

The ISM surveys were disappointing for Dec. The services ISM eased more notably with slower output and orders growth. Firms noted continued price pressures. Manufacturing momentum also eased somewhat – especially the pace of price growth and supplier delivery times.

Fed Nomination Hearings

This week the focus will be on the important FOMC nomination hearings in the US senate for Chair Powell (Tue) and Governor Brainard (Thur). The last time Chair Powell testified, senators conveyed their concern about high inflation.

US CPI

The US CPI for Dec will be released this week. CPI is expected to increase by 7% in Dec (up from 6.8% in Nov). The monthly increase is expected to ease to +0.4% (from +0.8% in Nov). Core CPI is expected to increase by 5.4% (up from 4.9% in Nov).

US Retail Sales

Also out this week will be US retail sales (expecting -0.1% in the month versus +0.3% in Nov) and the University of Michigan prelim consumer sentiment for Jan (expecting 70).

This week, the US Treasury will auction and settle approx. $241bn in ST Bills, raising approx. $23bn in new money. The US Treasury will also auction the 3yr and 10yr Notes and the 30yr Bond this week – to settle next week.

Approx. $18.5bn in ST Bills will mature on the Fed balance sheet this week and will be rolled over.

Next Monday 17 Jan will be Martin Luther King Jr Holiday (US).

More detail (including a calendar of key data releases) is provided in the briefing document – download the pdf below:

Comments and feedback are welcome. Please email me at kim.mofardin@marscapitalpartners.net.