
Last January, at ꦿHeavy Duty Aftermarket Dialogue in Grapevine, Texas🥂, we discussed how the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) would execute the next steps in its efforts to bring down the rate of inflation.
The questions were how, when and why it would pause, and then pivot, from its policy of raising the federal funds rate. Pause-and-pivot is bond market talk for how the FOMC will first stop raising the funds rate (pause) and then start lowering the funds rate (pivot).[RELATED: ꧋Class 8 sales rate 'unsustainable' in current freight environment]
And then SVB and Signature Bank happened. And, with that, the second front of the war opened: Systemic risk.🍒The latest comments by the FOMC, which were made after its most recent meeting, mentioned the systemic risk issue as one it considered in the decision to continue to raise the federal funds rate. It also reiterated that lowering the rate of inflation is its primary objective.
All of which suggest the protocols and procedures we expected them to follow in January are still in place, and that the pause-and-pivot are still some months away. Turbulence in the banking system, however, could accelerate the pace at which a change in policy is considered.Robert F. Dieli is president and founder of RDLB Inc., an economic research and management consulting firm based in Lombard, Ill.
From 1978 to 1987, Dieli served as an economist and later as a risk manager at The Continental Illinois National Bank of Chicago. From 1987 to 2000, Dieli held positions as economist and fixed income portfolio manager at The Northern Trust Company of Chicago. Dieli left the Northern Trust in 2001 to start RDLB Inc.
In addition to being an economic advisor to MacKay & Company, RDLB Inc., also publishes Mr. Model, a monthly series of reports on current and prospective conditions in the US economy, from its web site at .