Economics
Fed Swaps Lean Toward Back-to-Back Three-Quarter-Point Hikes
- Hotter-than-expected September inflation data spark shift
- Market also prices in a higher eventual peak policy rate
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The market for wagers on the Federal Reserve’s policy rate is leaning toward pricing back-to-back 75 basis point rate hikes in the next two central bank meetings after consumer prices rose more than forecast in September.
The rate on the November overnight index swap contract rose to 3.86%, more than 75 basis points above the current effective fed funds rate, while the one referring to December climbed to 4.50%. A total of 142 basis points of rate hikes are now priced in for the next two policy meetings, just short of consecutive three-quarter-point hikes.