Fed to unveil another big rate hike as signs of economic slowdown grow
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[July 27, 2022] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - With the Federal
Reserve expected to hike its key interest rate by three-quarters of a
percentage point on Wednesday to battle high inflation, focus will shift
to how deeply signs of an economic slowdown have registered with its
policymakers.
The anticipated increase in the target federal funds rate, the Fed's key
tool in trying to lower inflation from a four-decade high, will bring
the U.S. central bank to a mile marker of sorts as it reaches a level of
around 2.4% that is estimated to no longer encourage economic activity.
That will represent one of the fastest-ever gear changes in U.S.
monetary policy - just over four months ago the policy rate was near
zero and the Fed was buying billions of dollars of bonds each month to
help the economy recover from the COVID-19 pandemic.
A fast trip to neutral:
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/POWELL/
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But while there has been little progress registered yet in the inflation
fight, signs of economic stress are accumulating - and raising the
stakes for Fed officials as they weigh just how much tighter monetary
policy needs to be to slow price increases against the risk that going
too far could trigger a recession.
Even ahead of this week's two-day policy meeting, the inflation problem
was considered so dire that investors placed about a one-in-four chance
the Fed would surprise markets with a larger 1-percentage-point increase
in its benchmark overnight interest rate, reminiscent of the hikes used
in the early 1980s by then-Fed Chair Paul Volcker.
As the Fed's impact on the economy becomes more apparent, the issue now
is whether it is at risk of overdoing it.
Parts of the U.S. bond market are signaling an increased likelihood of
recession, with yields on 2-year U.S. Treasury notes now higher than
they are for 10-year Treasuries, a possible sign of lost faith in
near-term economic growth and reflecting a possibility the Fed may be
forced to cut rates within a relatively short span of time.
Fears of a stalling economy were stoked late on Monday when Walmart Inc,
whose massive footprint offers a broad view of consumer behavior, cut
its profit outlook and said inflation had pressed shoppers to spend
their money on food and fuel instead of higher-margin discretionary
items like electronics and apparel. General Motors Co, for its part,
said it had eased hiring and delayed planned spending in response to
inflation and to hedge against a possible broader slowdown.
The U.S. Commerce Department is expected on Thursday to report that
gross domestic product grew at a turgid pace in the second quarter. New
employment data scheduled to be released next week will show whether
robust job creation, considered an important strength of the U.S.
economy right now, continued in July.
CONFLICTING DATA
Fed policymakers will not issue new economic projections of their own on
Wednesday. But a new policy statement due to be released at 2 p.m. EDT
(1800 GMT) and Fed Chair Jerome Powell's news conference half an hour
later should elaborate on how the central bank views the recent economic
data and at least hint at its next steps.
[to top of second column] |
U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell takes questions during a
news conference following a two-day meeting of the Federal Open
Market Committee (FOMC) in Washington, U.S., June 15, 2022.
REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz/File Photo
That will almost certainly include another interest rate increase at the Fed's
next policy meeting in September, with upcoming inflation data likely to shape
whether officials opt for another 75-basis-point increase, or scale back to a
half-percentage-point move.
With consumer prices rising at a more than a 9% annual rate as of June, "the Fed
will not slow the pace of hikes until they are convinced inflation has turned,"
Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, wrote recently.
A number of Fed officials at various points since the start of the year have
said they thought inflation had peaked, only to be caught out as prices
continued to rise faster. By the Fed's preferred measure, inflation is running
at more than three times the central bank's 2% annual target, leaving
policymakers aligned behind not just the unusually large 75-basis-point hikes -
the biggest moves since 1994 - but a promise to continue raising borrowing costs
until monthly inflation numbers fall.
To some economists that has heightened the risk of error, since data on prices
may lag the impact of rising rates on the economy and prompt the Fed to continue
its monetary policy tightening in the midst of a slowdown.
The average contract rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage has risen from below
3% to about 5.5% on the basis of the Fed's rate hikes so far, for example, and
new home sales already have fallen to the lowest levels since the start of the
pandemic.
By the time of the Fed's Sept. 20-21 meeting, policymakers will have two months
of additional data in hand on prices, consumer spending, business output, jobs,
and other aspects of the economy.
If inflation does slow before that meeting, it could clear the way for the Fed
to slow down.
Investors, as of now, are roughly split over whether that will happen, with data
likely to continue pulling in both directions.
The U.S. economy "is likely to have contracted in the first half of the year,
but job growth remains robust. Inflation is leading to record-low consumer
sentiment, but consumers are still spending," as are businesses, Greg Daco,
chief economist at EY-Parthenon, wrote this week. The U.S. right now is "a world
of paradox."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Paul Simao)
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