September Fed Meeting: More Bullish Fuel For A Smoldering Commodities Market

 | Sep 29, 2020 15:25

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • Dollar Index bear market isn't bearish for commodity prices
  • Stimulus and liquidity are bullish catalysts for raw materials going forward
  • A risk-off period is an opportunity to add commodity exposure to portfolios
  • 2008 through 2012 could be model for the coming years, but markets rarely move in a straight line

The most recent meeting of the US Federal Reserve’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), in mid-September, formalized a shift in central bank policy. The FOMC establishes short-term interest rates.

The Fed Funds Rate is a tool that allows the central bank to react to changes in the economic landscape. The committee made no changes in the short-term rate as it remained at the zero to twenty-five basis point level, the lowest in history.

The Fed followed through on Chairman Powell’s comment from the Jackson Hole virtual conference in August. He told markets that the central bank will no longer consider a 2% target rate for inflation a line in the sand but would look for an average of 2% over time. The policy change will allow inflationary pressures to rise above the target rate for a “period.” Some committee members suggested that inflation could increase to 2.25% or even 2.50% before the Fed uses interest rate policy.

The central bank lowered short-term rates to zero percent earlier this year, fired bazookas of liquidity into the financial system, and employed quantitative easing to push rates lower further out along the yield curve. These policies, to encourage borrowing and spending and inhibit saving, are a reaction to the weak economy caused by the pandemic. The latest move to allow and even promote inflation to rise amounts to more bullish fuel for the commodities asset class.

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The Dollar Index bounced over the past week and was trading at the 94.682 level on Friday, September 25.