Fed's matchmaker fear: Flatlining economy meets higher interest rates
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[January 29, 2022] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Federal Reserve
plans to raise interest rates in March on the assumption the U.S.
economy will largely steer clear of fallout from the Omicron variant of
the coronavirus and keep growing at a healthy clip.
What if it doesn't?
With financial markets fast adapting to expectations of an ever-more
aggressive Fed battle against inflation, year-end data showed
weaker-than-anticipated results for some of the inflation measures the
U.S. central bank watches closely, a reminder of how uncertain its
ultimate policy path remains.
The numbers were still high, with the employment cost index, the
broadest measure of labor costs, rising 4% on a year-on-year basis in
the fourth quarter, the largest increase since 2001, and the personal
consumption expenditures price index jumping 5.8% on a year-on-year
basis in December, the biggest annual rise since 1982 and nearly triple
the Fed's 2% inflation target.
But the pace of change from the previous periods fell, and even as
investors and many analysts continued penciling in more and faster Fed
rate increases this year, some added a footnote.
The slowdown in employment cost growth, for example, was a "big step in
the right direction" for Fed officials who expect price trends to ease
on their own, said Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon
Macroeconomics.
Where Fed Chair Jerome Powell and other U.S. central bank officials have
emphasized the risk that inflation may prove higher and require them to
raise borrowing costs faster then expected, Shepherdson in recent
forecasts sketched an opposing view: Of an economy that flatlines
because of the coronavirus pandemic in the first three months of 2022,
loses jobs in January and February, and produces inflation that is
"falling sharply" by the second quarter, just as the Fed is presumably
gearing up for its rate increases.
That scenario, out of step with investors who expect five rate hikes
this year and some forecasters who have gone as high as seven, shows the
degree of uncertainty still in play around where the economy is heading
and how the Fed will respond.
'NO ROAD MAP'
An interest rate hike at the Fed's March 15-16 policy meeting is
virtually assured at this point. But even the size of that increase is
up in the air as some analysts expect the Fed, rather than the usual
quarter-percentage-point rate hike, to opt for a larger
half-percentage-point rise to tighten credit faster and demonstrate its
seriousness in lowering inflation.
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Minneapolis Federal Reserve President Neel Kashkari poses during an
interview with Reuters in his office at the bank's headquarters in
Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S., January 10, 2020. REUTERS/ Ann Saphir/File
Photo
Much, however, rides on how the economy, inflation, financial markets and the
virus behave in coming weeks.
Major U.S. stock indexes were trading higher on Friday, punctuating a week of
heavy losses. Earlier in the day, the U.S. Commerce Department reported that
consumer spending fell in December, weakness that may have continued into
January given the massive outbreak of new coronavirus cases.
Consumer sentiment continued to decline at the start of the year, hitting the
lowest point in a decade, according to the University of Michigan's closely
watched gauge of American households' sentiment. Survey director Richard Curtin
said the combination of Omicron, high inflation, and the steady dose of news
about future Fed rate hikes could trigger a consumer backlash - a possible blow
to economic growth on top of what's already coming through lowered government
spending.
"The danger is that consumers may overreact to these tiny nudges," Curtin said.
That could help with inflation, at least some of which has been driven by strong
demand for goods during the pandemic, but the Fed may be treading a fine line
between what's needed to temper prices and what would be an overreach.
"Panic within the Fed's ranks has begun to set in. The challenge now is to tamp
down inflation without allowing the flame on the overall economy to go out,"
wrote Diane Swonk, chief economist at Grant Thornton, a professional services
firm. "There is no road map for doing this after inflation has surged."
Bond markets on Friday were showing some signs of caution. U.S. Treasury yields
fell, and the gap between longer-term and shorter-term securities has narrowed -
often taken as a loss of faith in future economic growth, falling inflation, or
both.
Either way, said Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari, it's a reason the U.S.
central bank may not ultimately need to "slam on the brakes" with aggressive
rate increases.
Despite the seemingly hawkish positioning of the Fed, Kashkari told NPR on
Friday that the aim is not to restrict the recovery but "let our foot off the
accelerator just a little bit."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Additional reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by
Dan Burns and Paul Simao)
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