Central Bankers, Rates, and FX
The Fed Blackout Window ended, allowing for the first batch of public appearances post-meeting. KC Fed President Schmid published his Dissent Statement, and the following sentence sums up his stance: “Inflation remains too high, the economy shows continued momentum, and the labor market—though cooling—remains largely in balance.”
Chicago Fed President Goolsbee was the second dissenter that preferred no cut. In his comments, he focused on the opportunity to let disinflation play out in the data before resuming cutting in Q1, saying, “we don’t take a lot of risk by waiting…”
Philly Fed President Paulson, who will be a voter in 2026, said she was a little more concerned about labor market weakness than upside inflation risk, but also underscored that “it is really, really important that we bring inflation all the way back to 2%.” Cleveland President Hammack, another 2026 voter, said she would prefer policy to be a little more restrictive than the current level.
Speaking of the Fed, the board of governors voted to reappoint 11 reserve bank presidents to new five-year terms. The 12th Fed President, Atlanta’s Bostic will be retiring at the end of the current term. That’s normally not a big, newsworthy event but in light of the highly politicized environment currently surrounding the Fed, it’s attracting more attention.
That brings us to a more broader look at rates. Global yields have backed up during December. US, Germany and France have seen 10 and 30y yields rise 15-20bp. The short end has also backed up ex-US by around 10bp across several major geographies. However in the US, the 2y has only moved about 3bp higher MTD, and this week saw the 2y decline 4bp on the heels of the Fed cut, pushing the curve steeper by ~10 more bp, reaching YTD highs.