By Daniel Kruger
Nov. 19 (Bloomberg) -- The headline in the financial futures market these days says Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke is withholding some vital information: The economy is so bad the central bank will have to lower interest rates at least three- quarters of a percentage point to avoid a recession.
Bernanke's two rate cuts since September failed to reassure the bond market, where volatility has risen four of the past five weeks, according to Merrill Lynch & Co.'s MOVE Index. Yields on Treasury bills, the haven for bond investors in times of turmoil, are near their lows of August, when losses on securities backed by subprime mortages froze credit markets.
While the record low dollar and the fastest inflation in 14 months give policy makers reasons to keep the target rate for overnight loans between banks at 4.5 percent, traders expect 3.75 percent early in 2008. Interest-rate futures on the Chicago Board of Trade show the Fed will cut borrowing costs in December and again in the first quarter, as the worst housing slump since 1991 deepens and retailers including J.C. Penney Co. and Macy's Inc. forecast slumping sales.
Investors are sending the message to Bernanke that ``you're wrong and we're going to lead you to the next ease,'' said Thomas Tucci, head of U.S. government bond trading in New York at RBC Capital Markets. The firm is the investment-banking arm of Canada's biggest bank.
Fed fund futures show traders see a 90 percent chance the central bank will reduce its target a quarter-percentage point to 4.25 percent at its Dec. 11 meeting, 67 percent odds of another 25-basis-point cut in January, and a 43 percent likelihood the rate falls to 3.75 percent in March. Policy makers already lowered the target from 5.25 percent in August.
Worse than LTCM
The Fed hasn't cut that much since 2001, when the economy shrank and policy makers lowered rates 11 times. Even when Russia defaulted and Long-Term Capital Management LP collapsed in 1998, policy makers only had to reduce rates 75 basis points.
The yield on the benchmark two-year note, the security most sensitive to rate expectations, fell 8.5 basis points last week to 3.34 percent, according to bond broker Cantor Fitzgerald LP. The price of the 3 5/8 percent Treasury due in October 2009 rose 4/32, or $1.25 per $1,000 face amount, to 100 17/32. The benchmark 10-year note yield declined 5 basis points, or 0.05 percentage point, to 4.17 percent.
Bernanke suggested the central bank is reluctant to lower rates again when he told Congress on Nov. 8 that the economy will likely ``slow noticeably'' this quarter while also citing ``upside risks'' to inflation. Fed Governor Randall Kroszner was more pointed, saying in a New York speech on Nov. 16 that ``the current stance of monetary policy should help the economy get through the rough patch during the next year.''
Stiglitz `Pessimistic'
Financial markets aren't buying it. Wells Fargo & Co. Chief Executive Officer John Stumpf said at a Merrill Lynch conference in New York on Nov. 15 that the housing market slump is the worst since the Great Depression.
Joseph Stiglitz, the Columbia University professor and Nobel-prize winning economist, said there is a 50 percent chance of a recession in the U.S. as a worldwide increase in credit costs following the collapse of the subprime mortgage market chokes off financing. ``I'm very pessimistic,'' Stiglitz said in an interview in London Nov. 16.
Financial companies may lose as much as $400 billion because of home foreclosures, based on a ``back-of-the-envelope'' calculation, Jan Hatzius, chief U.S. economist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. in New York, wrote in a report last week. That will force banks, brokerages and hedge funds to cut lending by $2 trillion, he estimated.
Bill Yields
Merrill's MOVE index reached 112.08 on Nov. 9, the highest since Sept. 20, and was at 99.14 on Nov. 16. The gap between yields on three-month bills and the Fed's target rate widened to 1.25 percentage points, the biggest gap since Sept. 14. Bill yields fell as low as 3.16 percent on Nov. 15, near this year's low of 3.09 percent on Aug. 20.
For the first time since 2001, yields on Treasuries maturing from three months to 10 years are below the federal funds rate. Five of the past six times that has happened, the economy entered a recession, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
Most analysts don't expect a recession. After annual growth of 3.9 percent from July to September, the economy will cool to a 1.5 percent pace this quarter and expand 2 percent in the first three months of 2008, according to the median estimate of 72 economists surveyed by Bloomberg from Nov. 1 to Nov. 8. The Fed will cut its target to 4.25 percent next quarter and leave it there through 2008, a separate survey shows.
Faster Inflation
Faster inflation is making Bernanke's job tougher. Consumer prices rose at a 3.5 percent annual rate in October, the most in 14 months, the Commerce Department said Nov. 15. Crude oil soared 56 percent this year, reaching a record $98.62 a barrel. The dollar sank to a record low of $1.4752 per euro on Nov. 9 and import prices rose 1.8 percent in October, the most in 17 months, the Labor Department said.
``It seems like there's an awful lot of price pressures,'' said Jamie Jackson, who oversees government debt trading at RiverSource Investments, a Minneapolis firm that manages $100 billion of bonds. ``It's harder to be a credible inflation fighter if you ease into accelerating inflation.''
The Fed is done cutting rates and 10-year yields may reach 4.75 percent next quarter, Jackson said.
Futures traders are betting the slump in housing and losses in credit markets will reduce consumer confidence and trump the threat of inflation, which erodes Treasuries' fixed payments.
`Saving the Economy'
``The Fed will not only need to save the financial markets, in very short order they're going to have to start saving the economy,'' said Tom di Galoma, head of Treasury trading in New York at Jefferies & Co., a brokerage for institutional investors. The 10-year yield will fall below 4 percent by the end of June and two-year yields to 3 percent, he said.
Homebuilding declined 20 percent last quarter, the seventh straight drop, subtracting a percentage point from economic growth, government data show. The National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo may say today that its index of builder sentiment fell to 17 this month from an all-time low of 18 in October, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey. The index averaged 42 last year.
Plano, Texas-based J.C. Penney, the third biggest U.S. department-store company, cut its fourth-quarter profit prediction by as much as a third last week. Macy's, based in Cincinnati, lowered its fourth-quarter sales guidance.
``The Fed tends to be backward looking,'' said Lacy Hunt, chief economist at Austin, Texas-based Hoisington Investment Management Co., which is buying zero-coupon and 30-year Treasuries, the most bullish bets that inflation will cool. ``They're always looking at the way the world was, not the way it will be. Market rates reflect the buying and selling decisions of millions and millions of decision-makers.''
Hunt predicts the Fed may lower its target to 2 percent in the next few years.
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