In focus today
A packed European central bank day kicks off with the Riksbank decision at 9:30 CET. We expect a 25bp cut to 2.50% and that the central bank will maintain a message of more cuts at the beginning of 2025. Following the November decision to cut by 50bp to 2.75%, the communication has been that the September rate path largely holds. We expect the new rate path to signal an endpoint of around 2.10%. See our preview in last week's Reading the Markets Sweden, 13 December.
We expect Norges Bank to keep the policy rate unchanged at 4.5% and to signal that the first cut is most likely to be delivered in March. The decision will be published at 10:00 CET. We expect that the rate path will be marginally adjusted upwards and indicate between three and four rate cuts next year and a policy rate of just over 2.5% towards the end of the forecast period. This is well in line with the current market pricing for next year, but significantly lower for 2026-27. Our full preview can be found in last week's Reading the Markets Norway, 13 December.
For the Bank of England (BoE) decision at 13:00 CET, we expect the Bank Rate to be kept unchanged at 4.75% in line with consensus and market pricing. We pencil in a vote split of 8-1. Note, this meeting will not include updated projections nor a press conference. In 2025, we expect cuts at every meeting starting in February and until H2 2025 where we pencil in a slowdown to only quarterly cuts. This leaves the Bank Rate at 3.25% by end-2025. See our Bank of England preview, 16 December, for more details.
Today's data calendar is light with the US Philly-Fed business sentiment indicator for December being one of few highlights. In Sweden, the social partners within the industry exchange demands for the 2025 wage negotiation this morning.
Economic and market news
What happened overnight
Bank of Japan (BoJ) chose to keep rates unchanged, which was in line with market pricing and our call. The vote split was 8-1. The economic recovery in Japan looks on track, real wages have at least stopped falling and inflation is close to target. Thus, there is a sound case for hiking rates. The need for yen-support however seemed a bit less acute and the cost of postponing to January had come down. At least that was the case before the hawkish Fed turn yesterday. The yen has had some rough hours, sliding another 1% vs. the USD, first on the FOMC meeting and then the BoJ announcement. If anything, Governor Ueda will probably take a hawkish tone on the press conference to avoid adding further to the yen slide. We expect the BoJ will hike by 25bp in January.
What happened yesterday
The Federal Reserve cut the policy rate target by 25bp to 4.25-4.50% at last night's meeting, yet Chair Powell struck a very hawkish tone on the outlook. Policy has entered 'a new phase', and barring major downside data surprises, the Fed expects a slower pace of rate cuts starting from January. The updated median dots now project only a single 25bp cut every six months for the next 2.5 years, while the longer-term dot was raised by 0.1pp to 3.0%. We have revised up our forecast for the Fed funds rate, and now expect only quarterly 25bp cuts from Mar/25 onwards. We maintain our terminal rate forecast at 3.00-3.25% (reached in Mar/26, prev. Sep/25). See Fed review: In a new phase, 18 December.
In the UK, inflation surprised slightly to the downside in November but overshot the BoE's forecast. Headline came in at 2.6% y/y (consensus: 2.6%, prior: 2.3%, BoE: 2.4%), core at 3.5% y/y (consensus: 3.6%, prior: 3.3%) and services at 5.0% y/y (consensus: 5.1%, prior: 5.0%, BoE. 4.9%). While service inflation momentum slowed, our own measure of core services, which excludes volatile components, increased slightly after edging lower the past many months. Service inflation is likely to stay around 5% for the next couple of months, arguing for a more gradual approach from the BoE.
In US politics, incoming President Trump warned fellow Republicans of potential ousting if they chose to support House Speaker Johnson's bipartisan funding bill, which would extend the current funding debate until mid-March. Trump insists that the bill should include an increase in the debt ceiling. If new funding is not agreed upon by Saturday, a partial shutdown of the US government could be the consequence.
Equities: Global equities declined sharply yesterday, driven by the US and the hawkish cut from the Federal Reserve, combined with a notable increase in inflation expectations in the Summary of Economic Projections (SEP). US equity markets got all the attention yesterday, as most indices experienced their worst session since the early August turmoil and ended close to the day's low following the Fed meeting. With the significant turnaround, some of the past winners were sold off the most, particularly in consumer discretionary and auto & components sectors, with Tesla leading the decline, down 8%. Additionally, inflation fears resurfaced, impacting growth stocks and especially small caps, with the Russell 2000 losing 4.4% yesterday. The VIX increased from 16 to 28, which speaks more about investors' positioning leading into this rather than the Fed change yesterday. As we approach Christmas, this situation becomes more delicate, as many investors likely remember 2018, when equities plummeted in December, accelerating towards Christmas Eve, only to recover the losses in the following three months. While we are in a different macroeconomic and monetary environment this time, we perceive risks for the markets, as investors are heavily loaded on risk and might be tempted to de-risk ahead of the holiday season. In the US yesterday, Dow -2.6%, S&P 500 -3.0%, Nasdaq -3.6%, and Russell 2000 -4.4%. Asian markets are lower this morning, but the movements are rather limited compared to what happened on Wall Street yesterday. US futures are mixed while European fugures are down by 1-1.5%.
FI: US rates rose significantly following yesterday's hawkish signals from Powell. The UST curve trades about 13-15bp higher this morning, which will of course have implications for the EUR rates markets today. As market-based inflation expectation measures are (roughly unchanged), yesterday's strong increase in yields and deep drop in equities has left US financial conditions significantly tighter. If this spills over to the EUR market, it could warrant a softer tone from the ECB at the coming period. The pricing of Fed cuts next year is about 20bp lower with only 35bp priced until end-2025. The EUR curve was roughly unchanged with the action happening after the close.
FX: FOMC decided to cut the Fed funds target range by 25bp to 4.25-4.50%, as expected. It was a hawkish cut as the rate path was lifted by half a percentage point for both 2025 and 2026, thus signalling a slower easing pace from here. The USD took a leap higher as did US yields. EUR/USD dropped well below 1.04 and USD/JPY toward 154.50, where the latter rose another figure to around 155.50 after the Bank of Japan left rates unchanged this morning. The overall reaction in EUR/Scandies was muted, though with a slight move higher. In relation to the Riksbank's rate decision today, market-moving surprises, if any, could come with guidance including the rate path. We expect unchanged rates from both the Bank of England and Norges Bank, in line with market pricing, and hence we expect the FX response will be muted.
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