Fed likely to resist pressure to cut U.S. rates this week
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[June 17, 2019] By
Ann Saphir and Howard Schneider
SAN FRANCISCO/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The
U.S. Federal Reserve, facing fresh demands by President Donald Trump to
cut interest rates, is expected to leave borrowing costs unchanged at a
policy meeting this week but possibly lay the groundwork for a rate cut
later this year.
New economic projections that will accompany the U.S. central bank's
policy statement on Wednesday will provide the most direct insight yet
into how deeply policymakers have been influenced by the U.S.-China
trade war, Trump's insistence on lower interest rates, and recent weaker
economic data.
Analysts expect the "dot plot" of year-end forecasts for the Fed's
benchmark overnight lending rate - the federal funds rate - will show a
growing number of policymakers are open to cutting rates in the coming
months, though nowhere near as aggressively as investors expect or Trump
wants.
The Fed is also widely, though not universally, expected to remove a
pledge to be "patient" in taking future action on rates, opening the
door to a possible cut at its coming policy meetings.
Risks may be rising, but "I don't think they want to box themselves into
a corner," said Carl Tannenbaum, chief economist at Northern Trust. "The
markets are set up for a cut in July, and if they don’t get it,
financial conditions will tighten."
The federal funds rate is currently set in a range of 2.25% to 2.50%.
The Fed's policy-setting committee is due to release its latest
statement and economic projections at 2 p.m. EDT (1800 GMT) on Wednesday
after the end of a two-day meeting. Fed Chairman Jerome Powell will hold
a press conference shortly after.
MIND THE DOTS
The Fed's last set of economic and policy projections, released in
March, showed most policymakers foresaw no need to change rates this
year and only very gradual rate hikes thereafter. (For a graphic of the
gap between market and Fed expectations, please see https://tmsnrt.rs/2WzJ6tu.)
But since that meeting the economic outlook has become cloudier.
Recent U.S. retail sales numbers were strong. But while unemployment has
held near a 50-year low of 3.6%, U.S. employers created a paltry 75,000
jobs in May. Inflation, which Powell says is low in part because of
temporary factors, continues to undershoot the Fed's 2% target.
The Atlanta Fed forecast on Friday that gross domestic product will
increase at a 2.1 percent annualized rate in the April-June quarter, a
drop from the 3.1 percent pace of the first three months of the year.
Trade uncertainty has increased as well, with Trump using the threat of
tariffs on goods from Mexico to force the country to curb the number of
mostly Central American immigrants crossing the U.S.-Mexico border.
He has also vowed to slap more tariffs on Chinese imports if no trade
deal is reached when he meets Chinese President Xi Jinping at a Group of
20 summit at the end of this month in Japan.
Concern that mounting tariffs could further slow U.S. and global
economic growth is one of the chief reasons traders in interest rate
futures loaded up on contracts anticipating three U.S. rate cuts by the
end of the year.
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The Federal Reserve building is pictured in Washington, DC, U.S.,
August 22, 2018. REUTERS/Chris Wattie/File Photo
Fed officials may have reason to trim their rate outlook a bit, but meeting
market expectations would involve a dramatic shift. Nine of the Fed's current 17
policymakers would have to move their rate projections downward for the median
to reflect a single cut, let alone three.
"Powell will do what he can to try to downplay the dots especially if they don’t
show what the markets want them to show," said Roberto Perli, economist at
Cornerstone Macro. "He will have a tough time."
Adding to the pressure for a rate cut is a yield curve inversion in parts of the
market for U.S. government debt, historically a precursor of recessions. The
three-month Treasury bill, for instance, has paid out a higher rate than a
5-year Treasury note for the last several months running.
And Trump, who has said that rates should be lowered by perhaps a full
percentage point or more, continues to publicly berate the Fed and Powell, his
handpicked chairman, for refusing to act.
"I've waited long enough," Trump said in an interview with ABC News last week,
talking favorably of the "old days" when Presidents Lyndon Johnson and Richard
Nixon intervened forcefully in Fed policy - and set the stage, many economists
argue, for the high inflation, economic volatility and recessions that followed
in the 1970s.
DOWNWARD SHIFT
Most of the more than 100 economists polled June 7-12 by Reuters say they are
not penciling in a rate cut until the third quarter of next year. But views are
shifting rapidly. Forty respondents expected at least one rate cut sometime in
2019, up from just eight who did in the previous poll.
Within the U.S. central bank, St. Louis Fed President James Bullard is the only
policymaker who has said a rate cut may be needed "soon."
Several others have signaled a readiness to move off their wait-and-see stance,
with Powell saying earlier this month in a speech in Chicago that the Fed will
act "as appropriate" in the face of risks posed by the global trade war and
other developments.
The word "patient," which had been repeatedly used by the Fed since early this
year to signal its willingness to hold off further rate hikes, was notably
absent from Powell's remarks, though the Fed chief stopped well short of
suggesting a rate cut was coming soon.
The Fed raised rates four times in 2018 but has since abandoned plans to
continue lifting borrowing costs this year.
It is likely to avoid signaling any move to cut rates until it is ready to
deliver, predicted Bruce Monrad, a high-yield bond portfolio manager at
Boston-based Northeast Investors Trust.
Nevertheless, Monrad added, Fed policymakers may have tied their own hands by
letting bets in financial markets stray so far. "They have had six months to
control the rhetoric. They really haven't walked back the market."
(Reporting by Ann Saphir and Howard Schneider; Editing by Paul Simao)
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