A Fed soft landing for jobs means something else has to crack; so far it
hasn't
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[June 09, 2022] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The healthy finances
of U.S. banks, companies and households, trumpeted during the pandemic
by Federal Reserve officials as a source of resilience, may be an
obstacle to battling inflation as central bankers raise interest rates
in an economy able so far to pay the price.
In outlining their aggressive turn to tighter monetary policy, Fed
officials say they hope to clamp down on the economy without destroying
jobs, with higher interest rates slowing things enough that companies
scale back the current high number of job vacancies while avoiding
layoffs or a hit to household income.
But that means the pain of inflation control would have to fall mostly
on owners of capital via a slowed housing market, higher corporate bond
rates, lower equity values, and a rising dollar to make imports cheaper
and induce domestic producers to hold down prices.
Economists including current and former Fed officials note that unlike
prior Fed rate hike cycles, there's no obvious weakness to exploit or
asset bubble to burst to quickly make a dent in inflation - nothing akin
to the highly overvalued housing markets of 2007 or the hypervalued
internet stocks of the late 1990s to provide the Fed more bang for its
expected rate hikes.
The adjustment to tighter Fed policy has been swift by some measures.
But it has been spread moderately across a range of markets, none
catastrophically, with little impact yet on inflation or consumer
spending.
That may come. Piper Sandler economists Roberto Perli and Benson Durham
recently estimated that financial conditions have tightened faster than
in any Fed cycle since at least the early 1990s, and should slow
economic growth "to about 1% by the end of the year," about half the
economy's underlying trend.
But the waiting game could itself mean a harder struggle for the Fed.
The depth of the problem depends on how fast and how close the Fed wants
inflation to get back to its 2% target from roughly triple that now,
said Donald Kohn, a former Fed vice chair now at the Brookings
Institution.
"The question is how far does inflation come down in the easy part of
the cycle" when growth may slow and unemployment rise by a small amount,
but before interest rates have gotten so high the economy falters, Kohn
said. "I am skeptical that's enough to get inflation back to the two
range. To get the last percentage point...they are going to have to
tighten more, and whether they can do that without a recession is an
open question."
GOOD NEWS, BAD NEWS
So far the pieces are not obviously fitting together.
The Fed has raised its short-term interest rate by three-quarters of a
percentage point this year and intends to keep at it with half-point
increases at its meeting next week and again in July. More will likely
follow.
While credit markets have responded with sharp increases in home
mortgage rates, for example, and equity markets with falling stock
prices, there's little evidence that has translated yet into
substantially lower demand or a substantial decline in inflation.
Home prices are still rising, though the pace may slow as sales ebb. The
S&P 500 has dropped 13% this year, and the decline in equity values
should, economists argue, feed into lower consumer spending. But the
index is also now roughly where it would have been had pre-pandemic
growth rates continued - hardly a collapse.
Corporate credit spreads have risen, potentially stressing weaker
borrowers or leading to pared expansion or investment spending. But the
Fed's most recent financial stability report noted debt service costs
remained low. A New York Fed corporate bond distress index has risen
this year, but peaked as Russia invaded Ukraine in February and has
fallen through the Fed's first rate hikes.
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A sign for hire is posted on the door of a GameStop in New York
City, U.S., April 29, 2022. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton/File Photo
Consumer spending remains strong, companies continue adding hundreds of
thousands of workers a month at higher wages, and some metrics the Fed is
watching, like job vacancy rates, have yet to subside.
The good news: That keeps the hoped-for narrative of inflation control without
job loss in play.
The bad news: Beyond some moderation in month-to-month inflation numbers,
there's little sense the pace of price increases has broken.
Graphic: Unemployed to job openings - https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/JOBS/egvbkmeoepq/chart.png
THE 'WILD CARD'
Policymakers next week will provide fresh economic and interest rate
projections. The latest consumer inflation data will be released Friday and is
expected to show prices still rising by more than 8% annually, a pace not seen
since the 1980s.
Deutsche Bank Chief Economist Matthew Luzzetti estimated Fed progress on
inflation will require financial conditions to tighten further - perhaps enough
to cause another 10% selloff in stocks, or a full 100-basis point rise in the
spread between investment grade corporate bond yields and Treasuries.
That would "help to tame inflation pressures while at least theoretically
keeping open a path to a soft landing," Luzzetti wrote.
The Fed is, in a sense, racing against the clock. The more it struggles to curb
demand and the longer inflation persists, the more policymakers may worry that
higher inflation is becoming embedded and in need of a more aggressive response.
A big unknown is how much help will come through other channels such as
improvement in the movement of goods out of China or of food and other
commodities out of Ukraine.
The flow of workers into jobs could also help. As more people join the labor
force, relocate for work, or retrain, vacancies may fall not, as they often do,
because the economy is weakening, but because of more efficient hiring.
Like changes in productivity, those are ways the Fed may get help on inflation
without higher borrowing costs, the central bank equivalent of a free lunch.
In a recent interview, Citi Chief Global Economist Nathan Sheets said Fed policy
will still work through its standard channels, with a slowed housing market, for
example, lowering demand for purchases of furniture and appliances.
But given the size of the inflation shock, and the uncertainty over how much
help will come from elsewhere, the adjustment may have to be that much tougher.
"If we don't get that improvement in those supply shocks...that means these
measures of financial conditions we're looking at are going to need to tighten
potentially significantly," Sheets said. "What makes me not entirely confident
is the whole issue of how much slowing...how much rise in unemployment, how much
reduction in the output gap is going to be necessary...to bring inflation down.
That's the wild card."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Andrea Ricci)
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