Fed, and Powell, face a new world of risk in pivot to tighter policy
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[March 01, 2022] By
Howard Schneider
(Reuters) - The U.S. Federal Reserve's plan
to end the loose money policies used to fight the pandemic is facing an
unexpectedly early test as the Russian invasion of Ukraine poses new
economic and financial risks already being felt in global markets.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell testifies before Congress on Wednesday and
Thursday, and his first comments on the economy in nearly five weeks
will confront a situation that has become markedly more complex since
January, when he outlined a straight-forward central bank effort to
address high U.S. inflation.
The remedy - steadily rising interest rates, an eventual reduction in
the Fed's bondholdings, and "nimble" attention to new data - may remain
largely intact. Inflation since Powell last spoke has accelerated, a Fed
report last week suggested it may prove more persistent than expected,
and the conflict in Europe could put even more pressure on prices.
But there may be a new note of caution in Powell's approach. Russia's
increasing isolation, with its central bank assets frozen and other
sanctions starting to bite, has driven global risk aversion higher and
pushed up the cost of dollar funding in European credit markets.
The jump was smaller than seen at the start of the coronavirus pandemic,
when trading became difficult even in usually free-flowing markets like
that for U.S. Treasury bonds, and prompted the Fed to intervene with
massive bond purchases of its own to keep the financial system
functioning.
Yet it is a reminder that efforts to punish the Russian government will
exact a cost, potentially in the form of slower global economic growth
and increased financial stress, that Fed officials may want to assess
before moving too aggressively. Allowing its own bondholdings to shrink
at a time of higher global financial risk, for example, is counter to
the Fed's own adopted role as the world's financial backstop of last
resort.
"So far all of the repricing in risk and dollar funding markets has been
orderly," said Columbia Threadneedle senior analyst Ed Al-Hussainy. But
the new uncertainty may "test" Fed facilities set up during the
coronavirus crisis to help keep financial markets running smoothly, and
possibly force the Fed to at least temporarily boost its purchases of
short-term U.S. Treasury securities because of increased world demand
for dollars.
"I think Powell sits down in front of Congress this week and says, one,
we are 100% focused on reacting to inflation. Two, we will support
market liquidity if necessary...Three, we will work hand in hand with
Treasury to impose sanctions on Russia and make sure that the U.S.
financial system has the capital and liquidity buffers to handle
spillover risks," he said.
FOCUS STILL ON INFLATION
Powell will testify Wednesday at 10 a.m. ET (1500 GMT) before the House
Financial Services Committee and at the same time on Thursday before the
Senate Banking Committee, one of the Fed chair's twice yearly
congressional appearances coinciding with publication of a semiannual
Fed review of monetary policy.
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An eagle tops the U.S. Federal Reserve building's facade in
Washington, July 31, 2013. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
The policy report was released last week, just two days after Russian forces
invaded Ukraine, and included just one terse mention that "recent geopolitical
tensions related to the Russia–Ukraine situation are a source of uncertainty in
global financial and commodity markets."The focus of the report was on U.S.
inflation, now running at triple the Fed's 2% target and, according to the
document, at risk of remaining higher than desired unless more people start
filling the record number of open jobs, and supply chains emerge from their
pandemic backlog.
Powell is likely to keep much of his focus on inflation and the need for the Fed
to begin raising interest rates from their current near zero level in response.
For a graphic: Fed policy rate and inflation hit a record gap:
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/FEDFUNDS/
movandmydpa/chart.png
The emergency setting is out of sync with the U.S. economy's comparatively fast
exit from the pandemic-induced recession of 2020, with the gap between consumer
inflation and the Fed's policy interest rate the widest on record as the central
bank continues to fuel an economy enjoying fast growth, rising wages, strong
consumer demand, and record demand for workers.
But analysts say Powell may well downplay the possibility the Fed approves a
half-percentage point increase to kick off this round of rate hikes, widely
expected at its March 15-16 meeting, in effect resolving an ongoing argument
among his colleagues that sparked its own bout of volatility and showed some
space between Fed officials.
Traders in markets linked to the Fed's policy interest rate, spurred by high
inflation and earlier comments from St. Louis Fed President James Bullard, were
convinced as of Feb. 10 that the Fed would approve a 50 basis point increase in
the Federal Funds rate at this month's meeting.
A related graphic: 50 basis points, there and back: https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-FED/HIKE/lbvgnzogrpq/chart.png
Other officials pushed back, and events since then have pointed towards a more
typical quarter point increase - and a Fed that may have become more cautious at
the margins.
"We now know what we are dealing with: a protracted stand-off between Russia and
the West. We also think it has reduced the risk of central banks slamming the
brakes to contain inflation," wrote analyst with the BlackRock Investment
Institute. Interest rates "are headed higher. Yet central banks may face less
political pressure to contain inflation as the conflict becomes an easy culprit
for higher prices. We believe this will allow them to move more cautiously."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Andrea Ricci)
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