Too good to be bad, too risky to be good, Fed managing 'unloved' economy
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[December 12, 2022] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - After playing catch-up with inflation through the
past year in a policy shift made urgent by relentlessly rising prices,
the U.S. Federal Reserve now faces a more subtle judgment about whether
the economy is strong enough to motor through even higher interest rates
or is on the cusp of a crack-up.
Financial markets and professional forecasters seem braced for the
latter. U.S. investors from crypto rebels to index fund loyalists lost
in excess of $8 trillion this year as markets wilted under the fastest
Fed rate hikes in 40 years; bond markets seem convinced a recession is
coming; economists, in surveys by Reuters and others, agree.
But that seemingly stressed environment is also sustaining unemployment
rates that are at record lows for Latinos and near record lows for
Blacks. Wage gains are strong and consumption, the mainstay of U.S.
economic growth, continues to increase even after adjusting for
inflation.
Many factors influence when and if the economy falls into recession; but
invariably it will involve rising unemployment and falling consumption.
"The economy has never been so unloved as it is now," Bob Schwartz,
senior U.S. economist at Oxford Economics, wrote in a recent analysis
that laid out the "bipolar" set of circumstances Fed officials will
parse in their two-day policy meeting this week.
Consumer sentiment is lousy, worse than when the economy was in the
throes of a pandemic, but bank accounts and spending both remain
healthy; manufacturing is contracting, but the service sector roars on
with the monthly job and wage growth to prove it; there is some evidence
inflation is easing, with gas prices back where they were a year ago,
but it is still higher than many have seen in their lifetimes and
continues stretching household budgets through rising food and other
costs.
There is enough evidence of weakness to fuel a narrative of imminent
recession.
"It is probably starting around now," said Dana Peterson, chief
economist at the Conference Board, who cited a steady decline this year
in the business group's list of leading economic indicators, and the
near-unanimous sense in a recent chief executive's survey that recession
is coming.
Graphic: Payroll growth remains strong Payroll growth remains strong,
https://www.reuters.com/graphics/USA-FED/JOBS/byvrjgewnve/chart.png 'NOT
CRACKING'
There is also enough evidence of strength to tell a story of continued
growth.
"There are signs of the labor market cooling - eroding a little bit,
definitely not cracking...It does not look recessionary" with ongoing
job gains of more than 250,000 monthly and some industries chronically
short staffed, said Guy Berger, principal economist for LinkedIn.
Fed officials will receive new consumer price data as their meeting
starts on Tuesday, and hope it shows continued slowing of price gains
after annual inflation eased below 8% for the first time in eight months
in October.
They have telegraphed plans to keep raising interest rates for now as
they try to cool the economy and keep prices in check. But they also
plan to move in smaller steps. After a series of large,
three-quarter-point rate increases this year pushed the target policy
rate from near zero in March to a range between 3.75% and 4%, U.S.
central bankers are expected to tack on a half point during a two-day
meeting concluding Wednesday.
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U.S. Federal Reserve Board Chairman
Jerome Powell departs after facing reporters at a news conference
following a two-day meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)
in Washington, U.S., June 15, 2022. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz/File
Photo
A new policy statement is to be issued at 2 p.m. EST (1900 GMT) and
a press conference by Fed Chair Jerome Powell is scheduled for 2:30.
The decision to move in smaller steps is both a recognition by Fed
policymakers that they may be near a stopping point after this
year's aggressive rate moves, and that each step from here raises
the risks of going too far.
To date, Fed officials do not feel they have overstepped.
"For all the talk of crashing the economy and breaking the financial
markets, it hasn't done that," Governor Christopher Waller said of
the Fed's shift in monetary policy this year, the most aggressive
since former Fed chair Paul Volcker fought a more severe outbreak of
inflation in the 1980s.
Graphic: Federal Funds rate and inflation, https://www.reuters.com/graphics/USA-FED/RATES/gkplwmwdevb/chart.png
'PLAUSIBLE' SOFT LANDING
That doesn't mean it won't. Along with the latest rate decision, the
Fed on Wednesday will provide updated projections for how high
officials think rates might need to move, how long they will stay
there, and how the economy will respond. It is an outlook that will
show if the central bank still believes it can lower inflation
without serious damage to the job market, and set the tone for U.S.
economic debate in the early stages of the 2024 presidential
campaign.
Bond investors seem to have made their bets, with interest rate
yield curves "inverted" in what has traditionally been seen as a
sign recession is coming.
Economists in separate polls by Reuters, the National Association
for Business Economics and the Philadelphia Federal Reserve have all
penciled in near-zero growth for 2023, and a high probability of an
outright downturn.
Whatever happens, NABE's panel of 51 professional forecasters said,
the Fed will be center stage.
"Two-thirds of panelists indicate the greatest downside risk to the
U.S. economic outlook through 2023 is 'too much monetary
tightness,'" the group said. "The greatest upside risk is also
linked to monetary policy actions," if the Fed navigates the economy
to its aimed-for "soft landing" that avoids recession.
Either way, 2023 is likely to tell the tale.
Powell has refused to put odds on the outcome, saying only that a
soft landing remains "plausible."
It will hinge on how inflation evolves. Developments like declining
rents have given a hint of disinflation in the pipeline. It will
also depend on how the job market adjusts, whether at the margins,
through slower hiring and wage growth, or at the core with layoffs
extensive enough to push the unemployment rate substantially higher.
Some, like Berger, insist there's a pathway through.
"If the optimists are right we have adjustment in the labor market,
the Fed is happy where inflation is going and they stop hitting the
brakes as hard," Berger said. "It is well within the realm of
possible."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Andrea
Ricci)
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