Fed minutes likely to detail bond-buying taper talks, inflation worries
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[August 18, 2021] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Insight into the
Federal Reserve's debate over when to end its pandemic-era emergency
programs and the level of concern among officials over a spike in
inflation should emerge on Wednesday with the release of a readout of
the U.S. central bank's policy meeting last month.
The minutes of the July 27-28 meeting, which are due to be released at 2
p.m. EDT (1800 GMT), will cover a session at which the Fed said it still
had faith in the U.S. economic recovery even as the Delta variant of the
coronavirus was fueling a troubling rise in cases. Officials also
continued laying plans for the eventual end of the central bank's $120
billion in monthly purchases of Treasury bonds and mortgage-backed
securities (MBS).
Although the health crisis has intensified in the past three weeks, the
economic recovery remains largely on track. U.S. job growth was strong
through July and inflation remained well above the Fed's 2% target - so
much so that some central bank policymakers have since urged a quick end
to emergency programs that they argue have outlived their usefulness.
Analysts expect the Fed to announce its plan for a "taper" of its asset
purchases as early as the Sept. 21-22 meeting of the policy-setting
Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), with less certainty about how fast
the actually reduction in the bond-buying program will proceed.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell may provide information as well in remarks to
the central bank's annual research conference in Jackson Hole, Wyoming,
next week.
A "uniquely uneven economic recovery has led to a splintering within the
(FOMC)" among those who feel the purchases should be reduced soon and
ended fast, and those who feel the Fed should be patient until the job
market recovers more fully, wrote Kathy Bostjancic, chief U.S. financial
economist for Oxford Economics.
Demand is outstripping the ability of global supply chains and labor
markets to keep pace and driving inflation higher, prompting officials
like St. Louis Fed President James Bullard to argue the bond purchases
should end soon so the central bank can raise its benchmark overnight
interest rate from the current near-zero level if needed. Fed officials
want the bond-buying program completed before any hike in borrowing
costs.
On the other hand, "dovish committee members believe (quantitative
easing) should continue until greater clarity is garnered on the
prospective pace of inflation and until the recovery in the labor
market" is more complete, Bostjancic wrote.
Graphic: The jobs hole facing Biden and the Fed ,
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/JOBS/jbyprzlrqpe/chart.png
[to top of second column] |
Federal Reserve Board building is pictured in Washington, U.S.,
March 19, 2019. REUTERS/Leah Millis
BENCHMARKS
The Fed at its last meeting acknowledged that progress had been made in
recovering the jobs lost to the pandemic. The minutes may offer further
clues on how much more progress must be made to clear the benchmark the
Fed has established for reducing its asset purchases, and whether
another month or two of strong employment gains would be enough.
The Fed said in December that it would not reduce those purchases until
there had been "substantial further progress" in the jobs recovery. At
that point, the economy was around 10 million jobs shy of where it was
before the pandemic. Employers have added 4.3 million jobs since then,
including a total of nearly 1.9 million jobs in June and July, a pace
some analysts expect to continue into the fall.
Graphic: "Substantial further progress" for the Fed?,
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/FEDPROGRESS/
yzdvxmmmdpx/chart.png
The minutes may also reflect the early stages of discussion about
another consequential Fed decision: When to raise interest rates.
Though that is unlikely to occur anytime soon, several Fed officials
have noted since the July meeting that one of the key tests for doing so
is already on the verge of being met, with inflation by some measures
approaching a multi-year average at the Fed's 2% target, and likely to
stay there.
Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic said last week that he felt the
central bank needed to begin discussing in more detail how it intends to
apply a new framework that allows periods of higher inflation to offset
periods of weaker price increases. The terms of any "overshoot" have
never been specified, and some policymakers are beginning to argue that
the pace of price hikes this year is adequate.
The Fed's preferred measure of prices, the personal consumption
expenditures (PCE) index excluding food and energy costs, rose at a 3.5%
annual rate in June, its quickest pace in nearly 30 years. July's
reading is due late next week.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Paul Simao)
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