Money markets now predict fewer than six, 25 bps Fed rate hikes in total this year, compared to mid-February expectations for a total 175 bps of tightening. Jim Caron, chief fixed income strategist at Morgan Stanley Investment Management, called the latest events "a double-edged sword," given the inflation threat from higher oil prices and the possible hit to economic growth from war. "There has been a recalibration of rate expectations and that has become very apparent with the pricing out of a 50 bps (Fed) hike for March," Caron said. "So, the question becomes one of trying to figure out what it means for the Fed."
The dilemma is less acute for the Fed than European peers, given Russia-linked growth setbacks are less likely in the United States. And U.S. inflation is at 40-year highs above 7%, while latest data showed unemployment rolls shrinking to levels last seen in 1970.
"When inflation is 6% to 7%, inactivity is not an option." British annual consumer price inflation (CPI) hit 5.5% in January, the highest since 1992. While the BoE expects CPI to peak around 7.25%, Citi economists reckon it could reach 8.1%.
The fall in yields since the announcement of sanctions against Russia is the sharpest since just after June 2016's Brexit referendum. Norway is also expected to raise rates on March 24.
Finally, the dash for safe assets has halted the rise in longer-dated Japanese bond yields - a headache for the Bank of Japan (BOJ), which targets 10-year yields in a band around 0%. "The pressure is off the BOJ as things have moved in their direction," Mizuho's Asher said of the March 18 BOJ meeting.
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