Fed rolls out biggest rate hike since 1994, flags slowing economy
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[June 16, 2022] By
Howard Schneider and Ann Saphir
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The Federal Reserve
on Wednesday approved its largest interest rate increase in more than a
quarter of a century to stem a surge in inflation that U.S. central bank
officials acknowledged may be eroding public trust in their power, and
being driven by events seen increasingly out of their hands.
The widely expected move raised the target federal funds rate by
three-quarters of a percentage point to a range of between 1.5% and
1.75%, still comparatively low by historic standards.
But the Fed's hawkish commitment to controlling inflation has already
touched off a broad tightening of credit conditions being felt in U.S.
housing and stock markets, and likely to slow demand throughout the
economy - the Fed's intent.
Officials also envision steady rate increases through the rest of this
year, perhaps including additional 75-basis-point hikes, with a federal
funds rate at 3.4% at year's end. That would be the highest level since
January 2008 and enough, Fed projections show, to slow the economy
markedly in coming months and lead to a rise in unemployment.
"We don't seek to put people out of work," Fed Chair Jerome Powell said
at a news conference after the end of the Fed's latest two-day policy
meeting, adding that the central bank was "not trying to induce a
recession."
Yet the Fed chief's remarks were among his most sobering yet about the
challenge he and his fellow policymakers face in lowering inflation from
its current 40-year high, to a level closer to its 2% target, without a
sharp slowdown in economic growth or a steep rise in unemployment.
"Our objective really is to bring inflation down to 2% while the labor
market remains strong ... What's becoming more clear is that many
factors that we don't control are going to play a very significant role
in deciding whether that's possible or not" Powell said, citing the war
in Ukraine and global supply concerns.
"There is a path for us to get there ... It is not getting easier. It is
getting more challenging," he told reporters, noting that the rate hikes
announced last month and in March so far had not only failed to slow
inflation, but allowed it to continue accelerating to a level that
recent data indicates have begun to influence public attitudes in a way
that could make the Fed's job even harder.
'EYE-CATCHING'
A survey released on Friday showed consumer inflation expectations
jumped sharply in June, a result Powell called "quite eye-catching," and
enough to tilt policymakers towards a larger 75-basis-point hike in
hopes of making faster progress on the inflation front and retaining
public trust that price increases will slow.
"This is something we need to take seriously," Powell said of the change
in consumer inflation expectations. "We're absolutely determined to keep
them anchored."
The faster pace of rate hikes outlined by officials on Wednesday more
closely aligns monetary policy with the rapid shift that took place this
week in financial market views of what it will take to bring price
pressures under control.
Bond yields fell after the release of Fed projections on Wednesday that
showed economic growth slowing to a below-trend rate of 1.7%, and
policymakers expecting to cut interest rates in 2024. Stocks on Wall
Street ended the day higher.
[to top of second column] |
Federal Reserve Board Chairman Jerome Powell speaks to reporters
after the Federal Reserve raised its target interest rate by
three-quarters of a percentage point to stem a disruptive surge in
inflation, 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
Interest rate futures markets also reflected about an 85% probability that the
Fed will raise rates by 75 basis points at its next policy meeting in July. For
September's meeting, however, the greater probability - at more than 50% - was
for a 50-basis-point increase.
Powell, departing from the firmer guidance he has previously given about future
rate increases, made no promises on Wednesday.
Given an unexpected jump in a monthly inflation report on Friday and the jump as
well in expectations, "75 basis points seemed like the right thing to do at this
meeting, and that's what we did," he said.
But he said rate hikes of that size were not likely to "be common," and that
when Fed policymakers gather in July an increase of either half a percentage
point or three-quarters of a point would be "most likely."
NOT A 'VOLCKER MOMENT'
The tightening of monetary policy was accompanied by a downgrade to the Fed's
economic outlook, with the economy now seen slowing to a below-trend 1.7% rate
of growth this year, unemployment rising to 3.7% by the end of this year, and
continuing to rise to 4.1% through 2024.
While no Fed policymaker projected an outright recession, the range of economic
growth forecasts edged toward zero in 2023 - with an index of Fed opinion
showing officials almost unanimous in thinking risks were for growth to be
slower, and inflation and unemployment higher, than expected.
Analysts, many of them critical of Fed projections in March that saw inflation
easing with modest rate hikes and no increase in the unemployment rate, said the
new outlook was more realistic.
"The Fed is willing to let the unemployment rate rise and risk a recession as
collateral damage to get inflation back down. This isn't a Volcker moment for
Powell given the magnitude of the hike, but he is like a Mini-Me version of
Volcker with this move," said Brian Jacobsen, senior investment strategist at
Allspring Global Investments, referring to former Fed Chair Paul Volcker, whose
battle with inflation in the early 1980s involved sharp and unexpected rate
increases of as much as four percentage points at a time.
Even with the more aggressive interest rate measures taken on Wednesday,
policymakers nevertheless see inflation as measured by the personal consumption
expenditures price index at 5.2% through this year and slowing only gradually to
2.2% in 2024.
Inflation has become the most pressing economic issue for the Fed and begun to
shape the political landscape as well, with household sentiment worsening amid
rising food and gasoline prices.
Kansas City Fed President Esther George was the only policymaker to dissent in
Wednesday's decision, preferring a half-percentage-point rate hike.
(Reporting by Howard SchneiderEditing by Chizu Nomiyama and Paul Simao)
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