Kelly Evans

You know those sunny, beautiful days when everyone is scrambling to the grocery store because they know a blizzard is coming? That's exactly how markets feel right now. On the surface, everything looks great: inflation is receding, jobs and GDP are growing, even jobless claims are pretty low still. But the forecast says a massive storm is coming.  

Leading indicators look pretty bad. The deeply inverted yield curves (notably, the 3-month/10-year) are a huge warning sign. But it can often take several months to a year for the downturn to fully set in. The Fed knows this. Markets know this. So why isn't the Fed acknowledging it? If their policy affects the economy with a 12-to-18 month lag, shouldn't they be way more focused on forward-looking data than anybody else? Instead, we get a lot of talk of how "employment is still holding up" and "we are committed to hiking rates over 5%."