There's one important reason why Fed interest rate hikes are different this time

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Not all Federal Reserve interest rate moves are created equal: some reverberate around the world and others, like March's highly-telegraphed increase, pass through markets with barely a whimper.

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While many factors make this effort to raise interest rates different from previous ones, a single challenge stands out: US economic growth, employment, and inflation have consistently disappointed during this lengthy but slow recovery.

Oxford Economics' review of 15 past rate hike cycles finds the current one "stands out across a range of metrics," write economists Jamie Thompson and Kathy Bostjancic.

Additional differences this time are, in their words:

  • A record low level of the fed funds rate at the start of the Fed tightening cycle
  • An unprecedented period of rate stability preceding the first hike
  • An unusually advanced stage of the business cycle ahead of tightening
  • Anticipated fiscal stimulus of a scale not seen during a tightening cycle since the early 1980s
  • Historically low levels of bond yields, reflecting in part remarkably low term premia
  • One of the most subdued global growth backdrops for decades

Not exactly reassuring - certainly uncharted waters.

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The US central bank is scheduled to release minutes for its March 14-15 policy meeting at 2 p.m. ET on Wednesday, April 5. Wall Street will be parsing the document for clues into how committed policymakers appear to further interest rate hikes this year and next.

Fed officials have suggested they might raise rates two, perhaps three more times in 2017, depending on who is speaking.

One key factor to watch is how much of the Fed's forecast for steady annual economic growth around 2% is predicated on hopes for implementation of policy promises from the Trump administration, like tax cuts and a fiscal stimulus, that look a lot less feasible after the president's healthcare plan failed.

Something else to keep an eye on: whether there was any sympathy for the dissent of Neel Kashkari of the Minneapolis Fed, who favored keeping rates on hold.

Regardless of what the minutes show, the message from Oxford Economics is that the central bank should tread cautiously given all the uncertainty.

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"While the implications of prospective Fed rate hikes are most likely benign, key features of the current tightening cycle stand in stark contrast to historical experience-and could conceivably lead to more serious market and economic disruption," Oxford Economics said.

"Based on our scenario analysis, the consequences would stretch far beyond the US, weigh heavily on the most vulnerable emerging market economies, and halt the nascent global recovery in its tracks."

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Oxford Economics

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