Chicago Fed’s Evans Goes From Hawkish To Dovish And Back To Hawkish Again In Under 2 Weeks

Just one week ago, when the US dollar was surging when one after another Fed president were making hawkish statements (who can forget Bullard’s forecast that a rate hike may occur as soon as April), one of the speeches which surprised the market the most, was that by Chicago Fed’s permadove Chuck Evans, who on March 22 met with reporters and was asked how comfortable he felt about the likelihood of two interest rate hikes this year.

Evans had pointed out that the median of the projections was for two rate hikes and that he was “comfortable” with that prediction — on the condition that gross domestic product grows by 2 percent to 2.5 percent and that unemployment falls from its current 4.9 percent to a range of 4.7 to 4.8 percent.

“Fundamentals are good for the economy,” he said during his speech. He noted, however, that past recoveries saw GDP growth of 3.5 percent.

“Currently, given my assessment, two rate increases is not at all unreasonable,” Evans said after his speech. “My projection would have two more this year on the basis of the outlook.”

And then, everything mysteriously changed less than two weeks later, when in the aftermath of Yellen’s superdovish speech, Evans talked back all of his hawkish commentary: cited by Reuters, Evans said that the Federal Reserve “should have more clarity by the end of the summer whether recent strength in U.S. inflation data is a lasting reality or merely a temporary blip due to winter-related irregularities in the surveys, a top Fed official said on Wednesday.”

“If we see the monthly numbers continue to come in more strongly and they begin to pile up I think you’d have to take that seriously. If it’s a residual seasonalities story we ought to see it waning at some point,” said Chicago Fed President Charles Evans.

But wait, it’s not over, because as we draft this, Evans is once again talking live, and making the following statements, which suggest the hawkish Evans from March 18 may be back:

  • EVANS: GREATER RISKS SUPPORTED SHALLOWER PATH AT MAR FOMC MTG
  • EVANS: STILL COMFORTABLE WITH TWO RATE HIKES THIS YEAR
  • EVANS: SEES ONE RATE HIKE IN MID-YEAR, ONE LATER IN YEAR
  • EVANS: WANT TO AVOID SITUATION WHERE NEGATIVE RATES NEEDED

As a reminder, the Fed Funds futures now imply a negligible chance of a June rate hikes, with at most one rate hike by the end of the year, so Evans saying 2 hikes means hawkishness is back.

Markets? Confused.


via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/21UBIEK Tyler Durden

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