The worsening of financial conditions this year led markets to price in
rates to remain unchanged at the January FOMC meeting, with many speculating
the Fed to deliver a dovish statement. This has now been realised. Language
used described that the FOMC recognised that economic activity had slowed and
that inflationary pressures and expectations had declined further. As a
result, it will now take an improvement in financial market conditions for
the Fed to hike again at their next meeting, which is in March.
Markets are currently only pricing in a 25% probability of a hike in
March. Yet, the Fed has indicated that their March meeting will hold a rate
increase if conditions recover. This means that markets believe there is only
a quarter chance of the market and economic situation improving. We agree
with this for the key reason that there is unlikely to be a catalyst to
improve conditions enough over the next two months.
Potential Positive Catalysts
The payrolls print at the beginning of January was particularly strong,
showing upward revisions for the previous two months and brining the three
months average up to 284,000 new jobs a month. However, markets failed to
react positively to this data. The continued risk off tone despite employment
strength indicates that markets believe other factors are much more important
in the current economic climate. This means that future payrolls prints are
also unlikely to have a positive effect.
Although employment data may not have the potential to be a catalyst for
better conditions, growth may. However, the next GDP report, released this
Friday, is expected to show soft economic performance. Meaning that growth as
a whole is unlikely to have a positive effect over the coming months.
Considering inflation, there is little to be optimistic about. Oil
continues to stay close to the lows while other commodities, such as copper,
also show weakness. These factors unlikely to drive costs higher, and the
lack of expansion in the oil industry flows over to other support sectors, such
as the industrials. Collectively the inflationary pressures from these
factors are unlikely to improve.
Longer Term Macro Risks
There is also the longer term effects of China’s currency devaluation to
consider. This has kept the US dollar at the highs, making exports less
competitive. Therefore there is the potential for this to have a yet to be
seen negative effect on the US economy that would see data weaken and thus
drag markets lower again.
Therefore we do not believe there is a major catalyst that can improve the
situation enough in the coming months to justify a rate hike. This means the
Fed will likely have to delay hiking at the March meeting and continue to
deliver a dovish message, as they did this week.
There is the possibility for a hike at the April FOMC meeting. However, it
is unlikely that the Fed would hike at a meeting without a press conference
after delaying hiking for two meetings. A statement lacks the depth to assure
markets of the reasoning behind market conditions being too poor to hike for
two meetings, and then suddenly improving enough in a month to require a
hike. Accordingly, we believe the Fed will be unlikely to raise rates again
until their meeting in June.
Dovish Fed Will Support Risk Assets
A dovish Fed over the coming months is likely to have a number of effects
on the financial markets. Already, the statement has caused gold to rally and
this is likely to continue. Just as continued, highly dovish policy from the
Fed fuelled the last long term bull market in gold, the current stance is
likely to push the yellow metal higher in the near term.
We believe gold is likely to continue rallying from here, challenging
resistance at $1150 and from the medium term downtrend line this week.
Following this we believe the yellow metal has the potential to test strong
resistance at $1180 and the long term downtrend. If this level breaks, we
will look to initiate aggressive longs on gold.
However, gold is not the only market offering trades with positive risk
reward dynamics. Equity markets are likely to benefit from a dovish Fed also.
Stocks performed exceptionally well throughout the Fed’s QE programs, with
volatility also remaining low during that time. Although the Fed’s stance is
not going back to that which drove stocks continually higher, we believe that
it is likely to cause equities to maintain their current levels and even give
them the potential to bounce back.
A bounce will be largely technically driven at this point. The S&P has
found a base at the support level of 1880 and the RSI has begun to rebound
from oversold levels, but still shows stocks to be oversold overall. This
means that stocks have the potential to rally and a base to do so from.
The key indicate that a bounce is likely is that the MACD is poised for a
sub-zero bullish crossover. This has historically been a key indicator that a
rally is imminent. The dovish statement from the Fed coincides with this to
allow a bounce to take place from a fundamental perspective also. Therefore
we will look to initiate a long trade once the crossover takes place.
Trading A Dovish Yellen
The exact details of our trades are available only to the subscribers of
our premium service, SK OptionTrader. However, we can provide an overview of
the type of trades we are considering.
We believe a bounce in stocks is likely to take place in the near term,
and the most aggressive rallies in stocks follow selloffs. However, without a
clear catalyst to cause conditions to improve it is much less likely that the
ground gained on a bounce will be maintained. This means that holding an
aggressive long term strategy has poor risk reward dynamics.
However, a quick play does have the potential to offer considerable
returns with much less expected downside. Buying calls, or call spreads to
reduce time premium costs, on SPY with strikes around $205 currently offer
favourable risk reward dynamics. If stocks rally as we expect, then this
type of trade is could outperform equities by ten times.
Regarding gold, we are considering aggressive long trades, such as buying
calls on GLD, if the yellow metal breaks through major resistance at the long
term downtrend line. However, there is still opportunity ahead of this. If
gold fails to break higher through $1180, it is still likely to challenge the
metal and remain high over the coming months. This means that selling
downside protection offers favourable risk reward dynamics, which we
discussed in much more depth in an article earlier this week.
If you wish to know the exact details of our trades and when they are
executed, please visit sign up via either of the buttons below. For those
considering subscribing to SK OptionTrader, please be aware that we are
closing to new clients on February 20th to ensure that the quality
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we recommend doing so sooner rather than later.
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