The Fed chairman didn't disappoint in rocking the market this morning. The long bond, which was down all of 1/32 prior to Alan Greenspan's Humphrey-Hawkins testimony, dropped sharply after the release of the testimony on the Web, largely due to one sentence: "The Federal Reserve must continue to evaluate, among other issues, whether the full extent of the policy easings undertaken last fall to address the seizing-up of financial markets remains appropriate as those disturbances abate."
Fed Funds Rate Signals No Rate Hike
Yields on the March fed funds contract fell today to 4.77% from 4.78%, indicating confidence that the Fed will not raise rates at the next Fed meeting, scheduled for March 30. In his testimony, Greenspan said "recent experience does seem to suggest that the economy has become less inflation-prone than in the past, so that the chances of an inflationary breakout arguably are, at least for now, less than they would have been under similar conditions in earlier cycles." "That suggests that there's no need to be preemptive," Sullivan said. "Going back four or five years ago, there was tremendous pressure to be preemptive." By contrast, the June and July contracts have both widened out this morning, currently yielding 4.83% and 4.86%, indicating greater expectations of a Fed tightening during the summer. The Fed chairman also said the Federal Open Market Committee will release statements at times after an FOMC meeting even if monetary policy has not been changed. (That is, if it moves to a tightening bias it'll tell the world now, instead of waiting until after the next meeting.) Most early questions from members of the Senate Banking Committee were devoted to financial reform, which the Fed chairman was scheduled to testify on today as well.>To order reprints of this article, click here: ReprintsTheStreet Premium Services For Personal Service: 877-471-2967
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| Dow Jones | S&P 500 | NASDAQ | 10-Year Note | |
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| 12,890.46 | 1,351.95 | 2,927.23 | 20.47 |
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