Fed Bias Shifts and Earnings Reinforce Bullish Outlook

The Federal Reserve held rates steady as expected last week, but the real story was the shift in tone inside the Committee. Three dissents in favor of moving to a neutral bias are highly unusual, and I do not recall seeing dissents on a bias in this way before. Powell acknowledged that the Fed is moving toward rate neutrality, and I do not see data that would justify a rate cut in June. In fact, looking across the economy, the next move in rates remains slightly more likely to be up than down.

The Fed Funds futures curve is remarkably flat. The July contract, covering the June meeting, is essentially where the current funds rate stands, and the January contract is only marginally lower. But investors continue to misunderstand what Fed Funds futures signal. They are not unbiased forecasts of future policy. They are negative beta contracts. If the economy weakens sharply, the Fed cuts, those contracts rise in price. That means they are downward-biased estimators of future Fed Funds rates. My estimate is that the bias is about 25 basis points over 12 months. Adjusting for that, the market pricing is effectively implying a rate increase is slightly more likely than a rate cut before year-end.

The economic data reinforce that view. Jobless claims fell to extraordinarily low levels, around 187,000, the lowest in more than 50 years. There may have been seasonal adjustment noise, particularly around New York, and claims may drift back toward 200,000 next week. But the broader message is unmistakable: there are no economy-wide layoffs. There is also no evidence that net AI-related layoffs are showing up in the claims data. Workers may be moving across firms or receiving packages, but they are not filing claims in a way that signals labor-market weakness.

First-quarter GDP came in at 2.0%, below some more optimistic forecasts but still a respectable number. The miss appears to have come largely from the Federal government spending. The private sector was strong. Retail sales were good. Durable goods were good. Housing starts were up, even if permits were a little soft. Across the real economy, I do not see weakness.

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