Fed officials still leaning to 75-basis-point rate hike in July
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[July 16, 2022]
By Howard Schneider and Lindsay Dunsmuir
TAMPA, Fla. (Reuters) -Federal Reserve
officials signaled Friday they will likely stick with a 75-basis-point
interest rate increase at their July 26-27 meeting, though a recent high
inflation reading could still warrant larger increases than anticipated
later in the year.
Data released earlier this week showing inflation had accelerated to an
annual rate of 9.1% in June raised the possibility the Fed might opt for
a larger 1 percentage point rate hike at its next session.
But comments from Fed officials on Friday, coupled with data showing
economic activity holding up and the inflation outlook among consumers
improving, undercut some of the urgency for a larger increase.
St. Louis Fed President James Bullard, among the chief advocates of
quicker and larger rate increases, said the "hot" inflation reading for
June warrants pushing the target federal funds rate to a range of
between 3.75% and 4.00% by the end of this year, a half percentage point
higher than his prior year-end aim.
"The Fed has to react ... charting out a course that is somewhat more
aggressive over the second half of this year," Bullard said at an event
organized by the European Economics & Financial Centre in London.
But he also said he was indifferent about whether the U.S. central bank
approves a 0.75-percentage-point rate increase this month, as
policymakers have flagged, or boosts that to a full percentage point.
"It probably doesn't make too much difference to do 100 basis points
here and less in the other three meetings (in 2022) or to do 75 basis
points here and slightly more in the remaining three meetings of the
year," Bullard said.
In separate comments at a forum organized by the Tampa Bay Business
Journal, Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic cautioned against the
central bank moving "too dramatically" because it could undermine the
strong hiring and other positive trends still seen in the economy.
While Bostic did not explicitly endorse a 75-basis-point increase at
this month's meeting, his comments seemed to lean away from a larger
rate hike in July.
Their remarks are the last before policymakers enter a "blackout" period
in which they are supposed to refrain from public statements in the week
before the central bank's policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee
gathers.
Traders in futures contracts tied to the Fed's short-term federal funds
policy rate shifted their bets firmly in favor of a
0.75-percentage-point increase at the upcoming meeting following the two
Fed officials' remarks. Traders had been leaning toward a
full-percentage-point jump since the Labor Department reported on
Wednesday that consumer prices rose at an annual pace of 9.1% in June,
the largest increase in more than four decades.
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St. Louis Fed President James Bullard speaks about the U.S. economy
during an interview in New York on February 26, 2015. REUTERS/Lucas
Jackson
BASE CASE
Both Bostic and Bullard reiterated the Fed's firm commitment to raising interest
rates as high as needed to control inflation, with Bostic saying "if the economy
moves in a way that is consistent with us getting to our 2% (inflation) target
then we will stop. And if it doesn't we won't."
That promise is being weighed against increased concerns that the Fed's efforts,
which have already prompted large jumps in home mortgage interest rates and
other forms of credit that directly hit household and businesses bottom lines,
will lead the economy into recession.
Both TS Lombard and Bank of America on Friday said they now expect the U.S. to
enter recession later this year.
Data released Friday showed key parts of the economy still resilient.
Retail sales rebounded in June, though they were down slightly on an
inflation-adjusted basis, while a New York Fed manufacturing index registered
unexpected gains.
Meanwhile, a closely watched measure of consumer inflation expectations improved
in June, what ISI Evercore vice chairman Krishna Guha deemed a "lucky break" for
Fed officials worried they were losing control of the public inflation outlook
and would need to act more aggressively to keep it "anchored."
A jump in consumer inflation expectations in part prompted Fed policymakers in
June to shift from an expected 0.5 percentage point rate increase to the larger
0.75 percentage point hike - a move meant to signal the Fed's commitment to the
inflation battle but which also amplified recession risks.
In comments to online news site Newsy, San Francisco Fed president Mary Daly on
Friday said that with the economy and labor market both strong, "I'm not
concerned about overcooking things" and sparking a recession.
The Fed isn't going to raise rates to an "extreme range," she said. "We're
talking about raising the interest rate from close to zero, which is where it
was during the entire pandemic that we just went through to something more like
in the 3% range....I don't have recession high on my list of outcomes."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider and Lindsay Dunsmuir; additional reporting by Ann
Saphir Editing by Paul Simao and Chizu Nomiyama)
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