Hello my friends and welcome to my January FOMC debrief. In a word this FOMC was without question hawkish but before we get into what happened let's level set a little bit. So the last meeting we had was the December FOMC and that meeting was Dovish. It was Dovish because it was at that time that Chirpal clearly signaled that rates were as high as they were going to go and the next move would be a cut.
Now since then risk assets arrived a lot and the markets had priced in a very aggressive rate cut cycle. Heading into the meeting today markets were thinking as many as six cuts this year and not without reason either. So the data of the past few weeks has been decisively soft landing. So GDP continues to grow above trend, unemployment remains low and most importantly inflation core PCE which is the Fed's favorite measure of inflation has been bang on at 2% for six months.
So in addition to that we've had a number of Fed speakers over the past few weeks come out and talk about how they look at the world through the lens of real interest rates which is nominal minus expected inflation. So as inflation is right on target as growth continues to be solid many anticipated including myself that the Fed would begin to gradually cut rates to make sure that they don't over tighten. They don't to make sure that real rates don't continue to rise as inflation expectations decline.
So that brings us into the meeting today. Now the first point as to why the meeting I think the meeting was hawkish was that Chirpal unequivocally pushed back against a March rate cut. Let's listen to what he said. We're going to be data dependent. We're going to be looking at this meeting by meeting. Based on the meeting today I would tell you that I don't think it's likely that the committee will reach a level of confidence by the time of the March meeting to identify March as the time to do that but that's to be seen.
So I wouldn't call it you know when you say when you ask me about in the near term I'm hearing that as March I would say I don't think that's probably not the most likely case or what we would call the base case. So central bankers are you know our bunch that don't really give you straight answers. What you just saw was a straight an answer as you ever get from a central baker saying that there's no way I'm going to cut in March.
Now I think many people in the press core found this to be strange because by all accounts it seemed like inflation was already under control as we discussed earlier. Core PC has been at 2% for six months and Chirpal acknowledged this. He acknowledged that the data has been good but he wants more good data. So six months is not enough for Chirpal maybe seven months maybe eight months. I'm not sure many people ask him about that but it seems my sense is that he is basically keeping the doves at bay and he really wants to make sure that they don't embark upon an easing cycle too soon otherwise you might have inflation re-accelerate which is exactly what happened in the 1970s the last time we've had an inflation problem.
Now my guess is that he understands that once he starts cutting the market is going to take that and run with it and going to continue to price even more aggressive rate cuts. So he seems to try to be holding interest rates as high as he can for as long as he can but I don't think it's really going to matter. What simply happens is that the market will start pricing in May cuts to higher degrees and simply just push the cutting cycle forward a little bit. So I'm not sure if a couple months really matters all that much but in any case I think the markets saw that the Chirpal is not cutting in March interpreted that as hawkish and reacted accordingly. So you saw stock sell off and we saw interest rates rise a bit above the curve.
Okay that's the first thing. Now the second thing that I thought was hawkish was less obviously so and it has to do with the discussion on tapering quantitative tightening. So as we all know the Fed is shrinking its balance sheet. From the Fed minutes we also learned that the Fed is talking about tapering QT that is to say slowing down the pace that it shrinks its balance sheet. Now many market people make market observers were listening to this and thinking that you know maybe this Fed might stop QT very soon.
Over the past few weeks we've had a number of Fed speakers come and present their viewpoint as to when they should taper and I have written about this. One Fed speaker thought that they should taper when the RFP balances are very low and if you look at the RFP balances they've been declining very aggressively over the past few months. Initially let's say last June there were above 2 trillion now there about 600 billion and so there were some people on the street who were thinking that you know if the Fed starts tapering QT when the RFP is low that could mean a taper as soon as March.
But that doesn't seem to be the case. So Chair Powell said that yeah we talked about shrinking the balance sheet this past meeting but for the really big discussion we're going to have that in March and from my perspective if you're having a really big discussion in March you're probably not going to be implementing it at the same meeting. So again my own view is that QT taper won't start until quarter four of this year but to the extent that there were some people on the street thinking that you would taper in March that has to be pushed up further out into the future and so on the margins I think that's also a bit hawkish as well.
Now going forward the sets up the March meeting to be a really important meeting. It's going to be important in two ways. First now Chair Powell acknowledged during the press conference that inflation has come down faster than expected. So by that logic then we could actually see the Fed's dot plot in March have more than the three cuts this year that were guided towards in December. So the dot plot can be more davish in March than it is in December because inflation has been progressing faster. Progressing towards two percent faster than expected.
And secondly of course we're going to have a lot more to discuss about quantitative the tapering of QT. So we could either have that at the press conference or more details could be leaked in the minutes of the March FOMC meeting. So that's definitely something to look towards in a few weeks and I will be back then to talk about it and that's why I prepared and we'll be back this weekend with Markets Weekly.