Fed set to slow pace of rate hikes as inflation Grinch loses steam
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[December 14, 2022] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Federal Reserve will conclude its last policy
meeting of the year on Wednesday on the back of a surprise drop in
inflation, consensus around a slowed pace of interest rate increases,
and markets primed for a coming halt in the monetary tightening.
Fed officials signaled in recent weeks that they would raise the U.S.
central bank's benchmark overnight interest rate by half a percentage
point at their two-day meeting this week, scaling back from four
straight three-quarters-of-a-percentage-point increases, in an
acknowledgement that rates were approaching the level needed to slow the
economy and lower inflation.
Along with the latest policy statement, which is scheduled to be
released at 2 p.m. EST (1900 GMT), officials will issue new projections
showing just how close that endpoint may be, with the release on Tuesday
of market-friendly inflation data for November triggering bets across
stock and bond markets that it may be closer than expected.
After the anticipated half-percentage-point increase on Wednesday, the
target federal funds rate would be set in the 4.25%-4.50% range.
Investors in contracts tied to the federal funds rate now see the Fed
scaling back to quarter-percentage-point hikes in February and March,
leaving the policy rate just shy of 5% at the stopping point.
The November inflation data, which showed consumer prices rising less
than expected for a second straight month, "increases the likelihood
that we could get a dovish surprise" from new policymaker projections
showing rates rising only another half percentage point by the end of
2023, Krishna Guha, vice chair of Evercore ISI, wrote ahead of the
policy decision. Guha, however, said he still expects Fed policymakers'
median rate projection to narrowly favor a higher endpoint in a range
from 5% to 5.25%.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell will hold a news conference at 2:30 p.m. to
elaborate on the policy decision and give more details on what might
happen in coming meetings.
The focus is likely to be less on the day's rate decision than fresh
economic projections that will mark a new phase in the Fed's policy
debate. With an interest rate peak in view, the new projections will
show both the progress expected on inflation over the year, and the cost
that higher interest rates may exact in terms of rising unemployment and
slower economic growth - tradeoffs that could begin to stress the Fed's
current policy consensus.
"The first half of 2023, that is clearly the discussion" as policymakers
weigh the federal funds rate needed to secure "the last mile of
inflation" control against potential job losses, said Joe Davis, global
chief economist at Vanguard.
"The labor market will be the swing factor," as officials analyze if
wage and job gains slow in coming months, Davis said. Powell has said
some cooling in the currently hot job market will be an important sign
the economy is heading towards consistently lower inflation.
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Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell
hosts an event on "Fed Listens: Transitioning to the Post-pandemic
Economy" at the Federal Reserve in Washington, U.S., September 23,
2022. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo
'SPITTING DISTANCE'
Policymakers have been caught off guard through much of this year by
higher-than-expected price increases, particularly in June when new
data released just ahead of a Fed policy meeting showed prices
accelerating. That prompted policymakers to rally around faster rate
hikes.
The Consumer Price Index (CPI) continues to rise fast, increasing in
November by 7.1% on an annual basis. But that is down from June's
rate of 9%, which was the highest in four decades.
The month-to-month pace of inflation has slowed even more markedly.
Excluding volatile food and energy prices, so-called "core"
inflation over the last three months has been around 4% on an
annualized basis, "within spitting distance" of where the Fed wants
to head, Wendy Edelberg, a senior fellow at the Brookings
Institution, said in a web presentation on Twitter on Tuesday. "We
are close to the end of this tightening cycle."
The Fed targets 2% inflation using a different measure that is
equivalent to consumer price inflation of around 2.5%.
Given the inflation surprises of the past year, Powell has been
reluctant to declare an end to the inflation battle, insisting that
any given month's change would not be convincing until a trend was
clear.
But having "front-loaded" the fastest shift in monetary policy in 40
years without causing either a major calamity in financial markets
or a significant rise in the unemployment rate, Fed officials have
also agreed to move more carefully from this point in order to avoid
stressing the economy too much.
In his last public remarks before this week's meeting, Powell
sketched out both why he was concerned that inflation may remain
elevated for some time to come, and his desire not to "overtighten"
and steer the economy into a recession.
The November CPI report should give policymakers some confidence
that data may finally be moving in their favor.
Within the core group of goods and services, shelter is now fueling
overall price increases, Inflation Insights President Omair Sharif
wrote. With monthly apartment rents in decline, headline shelter
inflation should over time begin to slow as well.
November's report "is not an outlier ... (it) showed a fairly
broad-based slowdown," Sharif said.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Paul Simao)
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