...for UBS to entertain the possibility of a rate hike shows...

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    ...for UBS to entertain the possibility of a rate hike shows that we can't be confident about anything with respect to markets and the economy. Because there are a number of outcomes that are uncontrollable by the Fed.

    ...soon the Fed would have to choose if they want to continue pushing the stubborn inflation lower OR save the economy from plunging into a recession. The Fed is walking on a tightrope. War is invariably inflationary, so the prospect of stagflation is rising by the day.

    ...Stagflation means higher unemployment and high inflation. If people find it difficult to live under high cost of living even with a job, it will get even tougher without a job. We need to ensure we have enough liquidity ahead (of need) to avoid being forced to sell stocks at lowest prices to raise liquidity.

    ...Better to Plan than to be in Denial. Wall St will sing the positive chorus even as cracks on the ceiling are starting to look visible. The last to leave the room are the masses (aka ordinary folks) sucked into the FOMO vortex.
    Fed Hiking Rates to 6.5% Is ‘Real Risk’ for UBS Strategists

    • Sees growing chance of inflation failing to decline to target
    • Fed hikes would flatten Treasuries, knock 10%-15% off equities

    By Alice Atkins
    April 16, 2024 at 2:40 AM GMT+10


    The combination of strong US growth and sticky inflation is raising the odds the Federal Reserve hikes rather than cuts interest rates, bringing borrowing costs to as high as 6.5% next year, according to UBS Group AG strategists.

    While the bank’s base case is for two rate cuts this year, UBS now sees a growing possibility that inflation fails to decline to the Fed’s target, spurring a pivot back to hikes and sparking a deep selloff in bonds and stocks. Markets have already scaled back bets on policy easing as recent US data has shown surprising strength in the world’s biggest economy.

    If the expansion remains resilient and inflation gets stuck at 2.5% or higher, there would be real risk the FOMC resumes raising rates again by early next year, reaching 6.5% Fed Funds by mid-next year,” said UBS strategists including Jonathan Pingle and Bhanu Baweja in a note.

    The call shows how major banks are coming to terms with the possibility that the most aggressive hiking cycle since the 1980s — taking the Fed’s rate to 5.5% — might not be over just yet. UBS has already tempered an aggressive view for 275 basis points of US cuts this year, to now forecast just 50 basis points.

    Its so-called “no landing scenario” of more rate hikes would prompt a sharp flattening of the US Treasury curve as benchmark yields move “meaningfully higher,” as well as a 10%-15% slide in equities, the strategists projected.

    The call followed stronger-than-expected US inflation data last week, and came ahead of US retail sales Monday that also topped estimates. That’s made for a string of hot data points, fanning concerns that inflation is becoming entrenched. Traders have drastically pared bets on Fed easing to price 41 basis points by December, down from 150 basis points at the start of the year.

    “Investors are in the early stages of worrying about an economy that may be running too hot,” the UBS strategists said. “In a high inflation scenario we would expect both government bonds to selloff and credit spreads to widen, making for a big catch down in multiples.”
 
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