Sunday , December 22 2024
Home / SNB & CHF / Presidential Elections and Fed Policy: How Close is Close?

Presidential Elections and Fed Policy: How Close is Close?

Summary:
The most important element in next week’s FOMC meeting may come from the dot plot and whether Fed officials back away from the two hikes thought appropriate in March. When looking the schedule of FOMC meetings, and understanding that when the Fed says “gradual” to describe the normalization process, it does not mean hiking at back-to-back meetings, seeing two hikes this year without a summer move is difficult. After the late-July meeting there are three FOMC meetings:  September 21, November 2 and December 14.  Some observers have suggested that the September and November meetings are too close to the November 8 election for the Fed to take action.    The Fed’s modern historical record during presidential years does not bear that out.  The September meeting is fair game.  In fact, there have been few times where the Fed moved in October ahead of the November election. Here is a quick summary beginning with the 1980 election: 1980:  Fed hikes by 100 bp twice in September. 1984:  After hiking by 75 bp in late-August, Fed begins easing in early Oct (25 bp) and proceeds to continue to cut a day after the election (Nov 7 bp 50 bp).  It cuts again in late-November (50 bp). 1988:  Tightening stops in August and Fed continues to tighten in late-November (13 bp).

Topics:
Marc Chandler considers the following as important: , , , ,

This could be interesting, too:

Nachrichten Ticker - www.finanzen.ch writes Krypto-Ausblick 2025: Stehen Bitcoin, Ethereum & Co. vor einem Boom oder Einbruch?

Connor O'Keeffe writes The Establishment’s “Principles” Are Fake

Per Bylund writes Bitcoiners’ Guide to Austrian Economics

Ron Paul writes What Are We Doing in Syria?

Presidential Elections and Fed Policy:  How Close is Close?The most important element in next week’s FOMC meeting may come from the dot plot and whether Fed officials back away from the two hikes thought appropriate in March. When looking the schedule of FOMC meetings, and understanding that when the Fed says “gradual” to describe the normalization process, it does not mean hiking at back-to-back meetings, seeing two hikes this year without a summer move is difficult.
After the late-July meeting there are three FOMC meetings:  September 21, November 2 and December 14.  Some observers have suggested that the September and November meetings are too close to the November 8 election for the Fed to take action.    The Fed’s modern historical record during presidential years does not bear that out.  The September meeting is fair game.  In fact, there have been few times where the Fed moved in October ahead of the November election.
Here is a quick summary beginning with the 1980 election:
1980:  Fed hikes by 100 bp twice in September.
1984:  After hiking by 75 bp in late-August, Fed begins easing in early Oct (25 bp) and proceeds to continue to cut a day after the election (Nov 7 bp 50 bp).  It cuts again in late-November (50 bp).
1988:  Tightening stops in August and Fed continues to tighten in late-November (13 bp).
1992:  Fed cuts in July (50 bp) and again in early-September (25 bp).
1996:  Policy on hold after a January cut (25 bp).
2000:  Fed hikes in May (50 bp) and then cuts in January 2001 (50 bp).
2004: Tightening mode with hikes (25 bp) in June, August, September and a week after November 2 election.
2008:  Aggressive easing mode.  Cuts rates four times in the first half (225 bp) and cuts rates twice. (50 bp a move) in October before bringing the Fed funds target to 0-25 bp in December.
Previous post Next post
Marc Chandler
He has been covering the global capital markets in one fashion or another for more than 30 years, working at economic consulting firms and global investment banks. After 14 years as the global head of currency strategy for Brown Brothers Harriman, Chandler joined Bannockburn Global Forex, as a managing partner and chief markets strategist as of October 1, 2018.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *