Fed chair Powell is not done telling markets where rates will go
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[July 26, 2022] By
Ann Saphir
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Since it began its
current round of interest-rate hikes this year, the U.S. Federal Reserve
has aimed to let investors know ahead of time not just where rates are
heading generally but exactly how big a move to expect each time.
And despite some snags, including what analysts say was a last-minute
but successfully telegraphed change of plans before the June meeting,
Fed Chair Jerome Powell isn't likely to abandon those efforts.
The Fed and other central banks have long used that signaling - known as
forward guidance in their parlance - to set expectations about where
policy is headed to help create the financial conditions conducive to
their goal. Coming out of the 2007-2009 financial crisis, for instance,
the Fed set very long-term guidance that ensured rates would not rise
for years.
The past year's run-in with the highest inflation in a generation has
forced changes to that - in particular, shortening the horizon over
which they can pledge certain actions.
"It’s a very difficult environment to try to give forward guidance 60,
90 days in advance," Powell said at a press conference after May's
meeting. "There are just so many things that can happen in the economy
and around the world. So, you know, we’re leaving ourselves room to look
at the data and make a decision as we get there."
Indeed, other central banks are encountering similar challenges and are
responding in new ways. The European Central Bank last week raised rates
more than it had promised at its prior meeting and did not provide
guidance for the size of next month's increase. The Bank of Canada
delivered a surprise full percentage point interest-rate increase
earlier this month without breathing a word in advance.
But as the head of the world's most important central bank now
undertaking its sharpest bout of policy tightening in decades, Powell
has a particular stake in making sure markets don't under- or
over-estimate what is coming, analysts say.
On Tuesday, U.S. central bankers start a two-day meeting at which they
are expected to ratify a 0.75 percentage point increase, the bigger of
two possible increments that Powell weeks ago said would be under
consideration.
And despite uncertainty over what data on inflation and employment in
the next two months will show, analysts broadly expect Powell to put
some parameters around September's rate hike decision as well.
"Monetary policy works through market expectations, and if they go
haywire, you end up tightening more than you want," said Piper Sandler
economist Roberto Perli. "I think it’s a tough game to play, but I think
it’s reasonable for them to play."
Former Fed governor and now Fed-watcher Larry Meyers says that on
Wednesday Powell may avoid a specific promise on the size of the next
hike, but may take "any opportunity to leave the impression it will be
50 or 75" basis points and "not to give the markets an incentive to
build in 100."
He'll also be looking for Powell to lay the groundwork for an eventual
pause in rate hikes by discussing what inflation "thresholds" could
trigger a slower pace of tightening.
SHOCKED THE MARKETS
The Fed began increasing its policy rate in March, lifting it a quarter
of a percentage point and noting that "ongoing increases in the target
range will be appropriate," a phrase most analysts expect it will repeat
this week
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A screen displays the Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell on the
trading floor at New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City,
New York, U.S., July 28, 2021. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File Photo
Powell had indicated the size of the March move a couple weeks ahead of
time, and likewise signaled, and then delivered, a half-point hike in
May.
The pattern changed in June, when the Fed delivered a 75-basis-point
hike, despite having for weeks signaled a smaller hike.
But even then, markets were prepped for it, thanks to a Wall Street
Journal article less than 48 hours ahead of the decision that flagged
the possibility of a bigger increase, given data days earlier showing
inflation and inflation expectations rising faster than anticipated.
The story was widely interpreted as a message from the Fed, which has
generally gotten high marks under Powell for its communications
effectiveness.
GRAPHIC: What Wall Street thinks of the Fed's messaging (https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/POWELL/lbpgnwkodvq/chart.png)
To Karim Basta, chief economist at III Capital Management, the last
minute switch was "suboptimal" and could have been avoided if Powell
hadn't given such specific guidance in the first place.
"It shocked the markets, it certainly shocked me, and again it's really
unnecessary," he said, adding he would prefer for Powell to stick to
giving a range of rate hike possibilities - or not say anything at all.
This week's rate hike will lift the Fed's policy rate to what
policymakers say is a "neutral" level, and further increases in
borrowing costs are expected to bite into economic growth and eventually
inflation as well.
SGH Macro Advisors' Tim Duy is among economists who say the central
bank's delay in reacting to rising inflation last year forced
policymakers this year to push rates up far more quickly than otherwise.
"They fell so far behind the data it became impossible for them to
follow through with the communications the way they typically would or
they would like to," Duy said. And it may not get easier, especially
when they decide it is time to slow rate hikes to a more usual
quarter-point increment.
Markets may react by immediately pricing in rate cuts, Duy said, easing
financial conditions and nudging up demand before the Fed may feel
inflation is heading convincingly down.
"The idea they will pivot to a measured pace of rate hikes is going to
be confused with a pivot toward cutting - that’s the communications
challenge," Duy said.
(Reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by Nick Zieminski)
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