Fed to pivot on inflation fears in the face of another uncertain year
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[December 13, 2021]
By Lindsay Dunsmuir
(Reuters) - The U.S. Federal Reserve, stung
by persistently high inflation and encouraged by lower-than-expected
unemployment, is set on Wednesday to chart a path of higher interest
rates next year as policymakers show their hands on just how soon and
how much they think borrowing costs will need to increase to keep the
economy on an even keel.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell has already flagged the rate-setting committee
will likely announce at its policy meeting this week that it will
accelerate the end of its bond-buying program, wrapping it up by March
instead of June, in order to clear the way for the Fed to lift off
interest rates from near zero, where they have been held since March
2020 when the coronavirus pandemic triggered a short but deep recession.
The sharp turn in rhetoric as the central bank plots its course out of
emergency era measures reflects the depth of unease over how the
COVID-19 pandemic has juiced demand, played havoc with supply chains and
led to broader and more persistent inflation that risks becoming
embedded in business and consumer expectations.
It will lead to policymakers' bringing forward their projections for
interest rate rises, in their so-called "dot plot," as part of their
forecasts, released quarterly, for economic growth, employment and
inflation as well as the timing of interest rate rises.
"The Fed needs to be a bit more aggressive with removing accommodation
than they have been," said Tim Duy, chief U.S. economist at SGH Macro
Advisors, who expects officials to revise their median forecast to two
rate hikes next year to rein in inflation levels, from a split at their
last meeting on if they even needed one.
Most analysts expect the Fed to stick to forecasting three rate hikes in
2023 and 2024, given officials still expect a rapid abatement of price
pressures in the latter half of next year as the pandemic recedes from
view.
For now, U.S. consumer price increases remain eye-watering. They
increased further in November, leading to the largest annual gain, at
6.8%, since 1982, Labor Department data showed on Friday, and well above
the central bank's 2% flexible average goal.
The impact of the Omicron variant may also keep inflation pressures
elevated by prolonging supply chain issues and exacerbating labor
shortages while doing less damage to economic growth than previous
waves.
How soon the Fed actually starts liftoff is less certain. Economists
polled by Reuters expect the Fed to raise interest rates in the third
quarter of next year, but as with other analysts, also note the risk is
a hike comes sooner.
Inflation is not expected to peak until March next year, just when the
Fed will likely have finished its bond taper, making it harder for
officials to communicate a more patient course.
Investors currently see a greater-than 50% probability that the Fed will
raise its benchmark overnight lending rate in May, according to CME
Group's FedWatch tool.
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Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell prepares to testify before a
Senate Banking Committee hybrid hearing on oversight of the Treasury
Department and the Federal Reserve on Capitol Hill in Washington,
U.S., November 30, 2021. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz/File Photo
In addition to the dots, investors would be wise to scrutinize
Powell, who has taken a more emboldened stance in shifting the Fed's
consensus, for his perception of the outlook next year.
"If Powell is in the camp of two rate hikes next year, that's a
fairly strong indication that you'll get rate liftoff in the middle
of next year," said Gregory Daco, chief U.S. economist at Oxford
Economics.
UNEMPLOYMENT RATE HELPS SEAL THE DEAL
What no longer appears to be hampering the Fed's tightening of
policy is the pace of job gains, with the central bank on track to
meet its maximum employment goal by the middle of next year.
The unemployment rate fell to 4.2% in November, far below the Fed's
estimate in September of 4.8% for year end. Officials will tweak
their unemployment estimates downward for this year and next. Their
economic growth forecasts, set to be revised down slightly this
year, may remain mostly intact.
What the Fed is aiming to do is keep their hiking path gradual after
liftoff in order to not choke off the labor market recovery and
encourage continued improvement in the labor force participation
rate, economists at Morgan Stanley wrote in a note to clients. A key
gauge of the job market's health watched closely by policymakers,
the rate is 61.8%, still about 1.5 percentage points below where it
was right before the pandemic and showing only modest signs of
improvement.
A gradual course of interest rate increases would allow the Fed to
claim it is prioritizing price stability but not at the expense of
the broad and inclusive employment goal it has championed.
But as with any forecast, reality may once again blow the Fed off
course, as both it and the world awaits news of the severity and
contagiousness of the Omicron variant, which is already complicating
hopes for a smoother path ahead next year and increasing financial
market volatility.
"The uncertainty to the outlook has increased," said Daco. "That
will be a feature of next year's environment where you have less
certainty as to what monetary policy will be and less certainty to
what the economic outlook is going to be."
(Reporting by Lindsay Dunsmuir; Editing by Dan Burns and Andrea
Ricci)
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