The Fed Has No Idea How To Tell The Market It's Going To Raise Rates
The market didn't seem that interested, as stocks were little changed after the release. And while there were some interesting headlines about how the Fed sees the global economy and its own economic projections, the big takeaway is this: the Fed has no idea how to tell the market it is going to raise rates.
Towards the end of the minutes, there is a big dense paragraph about the Fed's communications regarding interest rates over the "medium term."
And in short, the Fed doesn't know how it wants to signal the future course of monetary policy.
"Most participants judged that it would be helpful to include new language in the Committee's forward guidance to clarify how the Committee's decision about when to begin the policy normalization process will depend on incoming information about the economy," the minutes say.
Which is fine. Some FOMC members want the Fed to make changes to its language. But how it would to do that is unclear.
"Some participants preferred to eliminate language in the statement indicating that the current target range for the federal funds rate would likely be maintained for a 'considerable time' after the end of the asset purchase program."
"Considerable time" is the much-debated phrase that some Wall Street economists expected to be cut back in the Fed's September statement. But now this phrase has remained in two successive policy announcements.
Notably, Wednesday's minutes indicated that some FOMC members wanted to eliminate "considerable time" because it doesn't make clear or imply that the Fed will be data-dependent when it raises rates.
In other words, when the labor market or inflation gauges are at a point that the Fed wants to hike rates, some members don't want the Fed to be beholden to some sort of unspoken covenant with the market that it would wait a "considerable time" before making a move.
And what's more, it's never been clear how long a "considerable time" really is, anyway.
But other committee members aren't so sure.
"However, other participants thought that the 'considerable time' phrase was useful in communicating the Committee's policy intentions or that additional wording could be used to emphasize the data-dependence of the Committee's decision process."
Additionally, other FOMC members thought that removing "considerable time" would be seen as "signaling a significant shift in the stance of policy, potentially resulting in an unintended tightening of financial conditions."
So then it seems that the Fed is in a bit of a pickle.
Some members think they need new phrases, but others are worried about new phrases, particularly the exclusion of "considerable time" because it will alter the market's interpretation of the Fed's policy intentions.
Additionally, others think "considerable time" needs to go precisely because of how the market is interpreting the Fed's policy intentions.
If that seems like a bit of a mess, it's because it is.
You can read the full text of minutes here.