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A trader works on the trading floor on the morning of the IPO for Chewy Inc. at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., June 14.ANDREW KELLY/Reuters

The Federal Open Market Committee meeting this week is shaping up as a pivotal one for Wall Street, with stocks primed for a sell-off should the Fed fail to take an even more dovish tilt after policy-makers raised expectations for a rate cut in recent weeks.

The benchmark S&P 500 has rallied more than 5 per cent this month as softening economic data coupled with comments by Fed officials heightened expectations the central bank will cut rates by the end of the year and, at the very least, telegraph it is leaning toward a later rate cut at its June 18 to 19 meeting.

Those gains came on the heels of a sell-off in May of nearly 7 per cent in the S&P, largely fuelled by investor concerns that trade wars were escalating, slowing the economy and putting it at risk of falling into a recession.

Bets for a rate cut were amplified by comments from Fed chair Jerome Powell on June 4, when he said the central bank will respond “as appropriate” to the risks from a global trade war and other developments, and after a weak May payrolls report on June 7.

Merrill Lynch chief economist Michelle Meyer expects the Fed’s “dot plots” projection of interest rates, which represents the anonymous, individual rate projections of Fed policy-makers for the next few years, to shift lower as officials start to factor in cuts. However, “the median dot will signal a Fed on hold,” Ms. Meyer said in a note.

“The market has somehow convinced themselves that we are in an easing cycle. I am not sure how we got so far ahead of ourselves,” said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at National Securities in New York.

“So now you’ve got Powell is kind of painted into a corner that he is really going to have to navigate carefully because you have market expectations that he said he would do whatever is appropriate.”

In a recent note to clients, Goldman Sachs economist Jan Hatzius said one of the themes from recent Fed commentary is that there is a wide range of views from central bank officials, although most “indicated trade policy increased downside risks by increasing uncertainty” and the result of continuing trade negotiations was highly uncertain.

Many investors had been looking toward the Group of 20 summit later this month for more definitive signs of the direction of trade talks between the United States and China, giving the Fed a clearer picture on whether to take action on rates at the July meeting. According to CME’s FedWatch tool, money market traders are pricing in an 88.4-per-cent chance of a rate cut of at least a quarter of a percentage point in July.

Any clarity from the Group of 20 may be hard to come by, however. U.S. President Donald Trump said on Friday “it doesn’t matter” if Chinese President Xi Jinping attends the G20 summit later this month, predicting a trade deal with Beijing would occur at some point anyway.

“They’ve put themselves in a position where they have optionality in both directions so they can respond,” Ward McCarthy, chief financial economist at Jefferies in New York, said of the Fed.

Economic data last week were a mixed bag, with retail sales topping expectations and halting a tide of weak indicators, including the payrolls report and readings on inflation in the form of May consumer and producer prices with implications for core personal consumption expenditures, the Fed’s favourite inflation measure.

“There were some important prints that confirmed some of the Fed’s fears – we didn’t get PCE but in PPI and CPI, you are not seeing inflation pressure bleeding through,” said Rob Haworth, senior investment strategist at U.S. Bank Wealth Management in Seattle.

Still, a cut at the June meeting has not been ruled out either, with the probability of a quarter-point cut put at 24.2 per cent, according to FedWatch. Asset manager Vanguard believes the Fed could implement an “insurance cut” as early as this week, according to the company’s global chief economist Joe Davis.

And it’s no surprise investors are willing to cheer a rate cut. According to Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist at CFRA Research in New York, of the past 16 rate-cut cycles going back to 1946, the S&P 500 has climbed an average of 10.3 per cent in the six months after the first rate cut and 14.1 per cent in the 12 months after.

However, cuts didn’t always precede a market boom, with declines coming five times in the six months after a new rate-cut cycle, including the most recent ones in 2007 and 2001.

And to some, any hope for a rate cut is misguided given the current economic and market environment.

“You have first quarter GDP at 3.1 per cent, you have almost record low unemployment and a stock market clamouring for a rate cut near all-time highs, it is basically ludicrous,” said Michael O’Rourke, chief market strategist at JonesTrading in Greenwich, Conn.

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