Chance of Fed hitting
'terminal rate' looking terminal: James Saft
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[June 15, 2017]
By James Saft
(Reuters) -
The
main thing terminal about the Federal Reserve’s 'terminal' interest rate
projections are the chances of rates actually making it that high in the
foreseeable future.
As expected, the Fed hiked on Wednesday by 25 basis points to 1.0-1.25
percent, but did so against an inflation and consumer backdrop which
casts grave doubt that it will actually be able to reach the 3 percent
'terminal' rate it sees as a future baseline.
Arguing that recent shortfalls in inflation were “transitory,” the Fed
kept to its forecast of one more 25-basis- point rate hike this year and
three in 2018. This despite the fact the Fed hasn’t actually hit its 2
percent annual inflation target on its preferred measure in more than
five years.
The Fed also expects to carry on hiking rates, presumably in part in
order to get some ammunition to expend when next the economy falters,
while at the same time moving forward with plans to begin shrinking its
$4.5 trillion balance sheet “this year”.
The financial markets aren’t having any of it, and are pricing in one
more increase in the next year.
Little wonder after today’s data, which should have given a
data-dependent central bank good reason to pause. U.S. consumer price
inflation in May fell 0.1 percent month-on-month while core, excluding
food and energy, is up just 1.7 percent in a year, down from 1.9 percent
a month ago. Core consumer sales also stalled in May, growing not at
all.
All of this makes the Fed’s forecasts, and the hawkish tone struck by
Fed Chair Janet Yellen at the press conference, look as if they are, in
part, seeking to signal confidence so as to achieve ends not justified
by the data.
“The Fed remains the test case for whether central banks can ever
‘normalize’ rates. We expect it to try, but fail - hiking the funds
target just once or maybe twice more in future forecast-round months,”
Neil Williams, Group Chief Economist, Hermes Investment Management, said
after the hike.
“With the lagged effects of previous hikes yet to come through - it
takes an average 18 months before rate hikes affect consumer spending in
full - delayed tax cuts, potential protectionism and cold winds
elsewhere, this should mean a ‘peak’ rate under two percent.”
Beyond the broader economic implications of a peak or, if you will,
terminal rate below 2 percent, the prospect puts the Fed in the ticklish
situation of very likely heading into a downturn dependent not just on
interest rate rises but also on its willingness to begin buying assets
once again. That and forward guidance, yet another largely discredited
policy.
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Flags fly over the Federal Reserve Headquarters on a windy day in
Washington, U.S., May 26, 2017. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
HEADING LOWER
Remember too, that one key difference since last the Fed hiked in March is that
there is now much less confidence in the Trump administration’s ability to carry
out either meaningful stimulative spending or midwifing a tax cut package which
would do more than pump up equity prices.
To be sure, the Fed is still saying that inflation will head back up toward its
2 percent target. But with core PCE up just 1.5 percent now, the Fed’s year-end
forecast of 1.7 percent is still two tenths of a percent lower than in March.
“The
unemployment rate has dropped by half a point in the past four months, but the
Fed now expects, comically, no further decline across the rest of the year. This
makes no sense at all and likely will have to be revised in September,” Ian
Shepherdson of Pantheon Macroeconomics wrote in a note to clients. The Fed also
appears not to expect labor force participation to increase meaningfully.
If so, unemployment, now 4.3 percent, could tick down from here. What is
striking is that the unemployment rate is falling further below the rate at
which the Fed figures unemployment should accelerate, but yet it accelerates
not.
Unemployment and inflation simply are not interacting as textbooks say they
should. Markets are looking at the data and taking it seriously; the Fed is
sticking, for now, with the textbooks.
“One side has to blink, and given the Fed's 50-year obsession with the
unemployment rate, it's unlikely to be Dr. Yellen,” Shepherdson wrote.
If inflation finally comes through, the Fed will look like heroes; if not, like
auto mechanics with the wrong set of tools and the wrong manual.
(Editing by James Dalgleish)
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