Fed hopes economy is on cusp of inflation slowdown as rate hikes loom
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[February 10, 2022] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - New data on Thursday
is expected to show U.S. inflation still at multi-decade highs, but
Federal Reserve officials are holding out hope that the peak may be
near.
"There is some evidence we are on the cusp" of inflation that begins to
ease perhaps by midyear, Atlanta Fed president Raphael Bostic said in an
interview with CNBC on Wednesday.
In separate comments Cleveland Fed president Loretta Mester said she
also expected inflation to ease this year as the Fed steadily tightens
credit.
The headline consumer price index is expected to have increased more
than 7% in January on an annualized basis, a level reminiscent of the
inflation shocks of the 1970s and 1980s that has pushed the Fed to
accelerate plans to raise borrowing costs and reduce its holdings of
government bonds and mortgage-backed securities
But the month-to-month pace of change has been easing, a sign the
economy may be working through supply-chain and other difficulties
created by the pandemic.
Graphic: Peaking inflation? -
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/INFLATION/klvykmjjwvg
/chart.png
"What we have seen is inflation not get worse on a month-to-month level,
and I am hopeful that will translate into a slow decline as we move
through the spring and into summer," Bostic said. That "will give me
some comfort that we are heading in the right direction" and perhaps
allow the Fed to raise rates at a slower pace as the economy continues
to recover, he said.
Graphic: Taking it in stride -
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/INFLATION/lbvgnwmydpq/
chart.png
There is broad agreement at the Fed to begin raising interest rates at
the March 15-16 policy meeting. But there is no clarity about how much
the Fed will have to do to counter inflation, or how likely it is that
goods supply chains and the U.S. labor market will return on their own
to something like the pre-pandemic normal of low inflation alongside low
rates of joblessness.
Some analysts argue the Fed is already out of step with where the
economy is heading. The unemployment rate is currently 4%, low by
historic standards, and may be heading much lower amid record numbers of
job openings, rising wages, and an economy that may surge over the year
as the current pandemic wave recedes.
Some see the unemployment rate dipping to or below 3% https://www.reuters.com/business/us-road-1950s-style-unemployment-it-may-only-be-pit-stop-2022-02-07
this year, something not seen since the 1950s.
"The economy is blowing through stop signs," Ethan Harris, Bank of
America's head of global economics, said this week. Harris has been
among the most aggressive forecasters in expecting the Fed will raise
interest rates seven times this year, which would mean hikes at each of
its remaining policy meetings in 2022.
"They are really not ready to capitulate and say we are late," in
fighting inflation, he said. "I think they should."
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Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta President Raphael W. Bostic speaks
at a European Financial Forum event in Dublin, Ireland February 13,
2019. REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne/File Photo
A lockstep, meeting-by-meeting tightening cycle has not been seen since the
early 2000s, at the end of former Fed chief Alan Greenspan's tenure.
But the pandemic-era economy has surprised more than once, and there are large
competing forces at work - a decline of federal government spending, for
example, that could slow consumption, and healthy household balance sheets that
could sustain it.
Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, said he expects a
combination of rising inventories, eased global shipping conditions, and initial
Fed rate increases will pull inflation down fast -- back to the Fed's 2% target
sometime next year, with prices for keys goods like automobiles even falling
later in 2022.
Rates will still need to rise, he said, but because the economy is improving,
not because of a Fed "sprint" to battle inflation.
Graphic: Where's the panic? -
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/INFLATION/gdvzynjakpw/
chart.png
"This Fed will tread cautiously once they feel they have the trend inflation
picture in hand. That should come by the middle of the year," Shepherdson said,
when he anticipates car prices will be "in free fall," housing price
appreciation will slow, and year-to-year price comparisons will work in the
favor of a lower inflation reading.
FINANCIAL MARKETS, SUPPLY CHAINS
In financial markets the interest rates charged to households and companies
already have risen since the Fed started slowing its bond purchases late last
year and signaled rate hikes to come. A "shadow" federal funds rate maintained
by the Atlanta Fed shows bond markets have produced the equivalent since then of
a nearly 2-percentage-point increase. The cost to finance a home is rising.
There is some evidence of supply-chain improvement as well. Inventories across
many goods sectors have been rebuilt, a buffer against the sort of shortages
that jacked up prices for goods early in the pandemic.
Following the release of its latest earnings on Wednesday, executives at
shipping giant A.P. Moller-Maersk said they anticipated a "normalization" in
global shipping conditions in the second half of 2022. Port backlogs and
container shortages have plagued companies throughout the pandemic as world
manufacturers found it harder to reopen the global economy than it was to shut
it down in response to the pandemic.
"Inflation has peaked," Moody's Analytics Chief Economist Mark Zandi said on
Twitter. "As the pandemic continues to fade...so too will inflation. Global
supply chains are ironing things out...And wage growth will moderate as workers
get healthy again."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Additional reporting by Jonnelle Marte; Editing
by Paul Simao and Andrea Ricci)
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