KEY POINTS
  • The Fed will have a tough time promising easy policy as markets watch increasingly strong economic data over the next couple of months.
  • The second quarter is expected to boom, and the Fed could look behind the curve while it keeps its commitment to zero rates and bond purchases in the three-month period.
  • Bond investors now see the first fed funds rate hike in December 2022 while the Fed's consensus is that there will be no rate hike through the end of 2023.
Chairman of the Federal Reserve Jerome Powell listens during a Senate Banking Committee hearing on "The Quarterly CARES Act Report to Congress" on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., December 1, 2020.

As the economy booms over the next couple of months, the Fed will have a more difficult time defending its super-easy policies.

Economists expect the second quarter to grow by more than 9%, and the monthly jobs reports are likely to show very strong hiring, with job growth averaging more than1 million new payrolls in each of the next several months.