Credit Markets Eye Fed Decision With $25 Billion of Sales on Tap

Investors will be anxiously awaiting the Federal Reserve interest rate decision next week.

Markets have already priced in a 50-basis-point hike on Wednesday, expecting the Fed will take a quicker approach in order to squash stubborn inflation. Accelerating U.S. labor costs and a resilient consumer are effectively giving the central bank the green light to raise interest rates by a half-point next week to tamp down price pressures.

What the Fed does next week will sway markets which are currently pricing in a near-equal chance that Fed policy makers in June will raise their benchmark rate by 75 basis points. The Fed hasn’t done a 75-basis-point increase since 1994, toward the end of a path from 3% to 6%.

Kicking Off May

Next week’s investment-grade issuance estimates call for about $25 billion, with some desks anticipating $125 billion to $150 billion in the historically busy month. Last May, just over $136 billion was issued compared to estimates projecting $150 billion. April, meanwhile, is set to close with $107.2 billion in sales.

Blue-chip companies sold just $8.6 billion this week, well below consensus estimates calling for as much as $25 billion. This was the second biggest miss this year, data compiled by Bloomberg show, after the week of Jan. 24, when just $2.6 billion of new debt was raised, well short of projections of $15 billion to $20 billion.