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 One
gauge of Fed sentiment are the yields on short-term Treasury bills and
notes. These are sensitive to anticipated Fed easing and tightening,
providing a way of assessing whether the Fed is more sensitive to
recession (and thus needs to ease rates) or whether the Fed is more
sensitive to inflation (and thus needs to hike rates).
Above
we see a chart of 2-year Treasury Note yields vs. the Dow Jones
Industrial Average for 2008. We saw aggressive Fed easing early in the
year as stocks moved to lows on the heels of banking problems. Indeed,
the Fed Funds rate moved from about 4.25% in January to under 3% in
March.
The Fed Funds rate has remained at 2% since May, but
2-year Treasury yields have crept up to over 2.5% since that time--even
as the Dow has moved to new lows and the GSEs (FNM and FRE) have been
in a tailspin. As bad as the economy looks, in the face of inflation,
markets are not expecting any quantitative easing from the Fed.
Originally posted at: http://traderfeed.blogspot.com/
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