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One chart shows why a September rate hike is a 'hard sell'

Traders are looking at the September and December Federal Reserve meetings for a possible interest-rate hike.

The Federal Reserve's latest interest-rate increase has come despite evidence that inflation is actually moving further below the central bank's 2% target rather than toward it.

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One chart from Morgan Stanley offers some insight into why market participants are attaching such a low probability of another rate increase in September and even doubting another move in December. Chances are, says Ellen Zentner, an economist at Morgan Stanley, in a research note to clients, the inflation rate will slip further before recovering.

"We forecast more weak readings ahead before core PCE inflation finally begins turning up later this year," she writes, referring to the personal consumption expenditures index excluding food and energy costs. "This makes a September rate hike a hard sell."

Some background on the Fed's calendar: The central bank meets eight times a year, but Fed Chair Janet Yellen holds press conferences after just four of those meetings, the ones that include updated economic and rate forecasts. For this reason, and despite Yellen's repeated assurances that every meeting is "live," traders have come to largely view meetings without press conferences as unlikely to produce news. Thus far, they have been correct.

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That's why Wall Street is discussing potential moves only at the September and December meetings and not at the July 25-26 and October 31-November 1 meetings.

Instead of hiking rates again, the Fed will wait out what it hopes is a temporary downward drift in inflation, which will probably be exacerbated by the recent slide in oil prices, by taking some initial steps toward shrinking its $4.5 trillion balance sheet.

"We expect the Fed to skip hiking at its September meeting to turn attention to setting balance sheet drawdown in motion, then resume hiking at the December meeting with data in-hand that core PCE inflation is again rising," Zentner writes. "Getting to 2% is difficult, but doable over the medium-term horizon."

Neel Kashkari, the president of the Minneapolis Fed, dissented against the June rate hike on the grounds that he would prefer to see inflation move closer to target before tightening policy further.

"The minutes from the meeting, to be released on Tuesday, July 5, will be immensely important is helping us gauge how many others voiced concern over inflation, even if it did not lead to dissents," Zentner adds.

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Already this week, the Dallas Fed’s president, Robert Kaplan, showed some hesitation about additional rate increases, pointing to low bond yields as signaling market expectations of soft economic growth.

"I think there's a point that if the 10-year Treasury rate stays at the level it's at, we've got to be very careful about how we remove accommodation," he said.

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