Chair Powell put it quite succinctly in the Q&A portion of the FOMC’s Press Conference to the December 15-16 Meeting, “The combination of the Cares Act and the strong monetary policy stimulus propelled a recovery that was, frankly, far stronger than we expected back in April, May, and June.” In this much anticipated FOMC Meeting, Chair Powell covered so much ground, and in this podcast, MUFG U.S. Rates Strategist, John Herrmann, attempts to bring it all to life.
First, over the very uncertain path of the Fed’s monthly Treasury security purchases, the Committee concluded that neither the pace (at $80.0 billion per month) nor the composition (proportionately across the yield curve) would change – matching our forecasts. Second, of the important forward guidance over the “horizon” of asset purchases, the Committee introduced “qualitative outcome-based forward guidance” that matched our predictions. Third, Chair Powell acknowledged that the coming three-four-five-months would be quite challenging – with the pandemic raging – but the growth rebound that follows would be a strong one, he believes.
Chair Powell strengthened the Committee’s projection for GDP growth over years 2021 and 2022, while lowering the projection for the unemployment rate. The Committee’s projections are not nearly as optimistic as our models forecasts, but Chair Powell is closing the gap, and catching up quickly. We commend the Chair and his Committee upon their excellent and thorough hard work in this most difficult of a year!