Fed's rate debate shifts to how, and when, to slow down
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[October 22, 2022] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Federal Reserve,
set to approve another large interest rate increase early next month, is
shifting to a debate over how much higher it can safely push borrowing
costs and how and when to slow the pace of future increases.
The U.S. central bank is likely to provide a signal at its Nov. 1-2
policy meeting as officials weigh what some see as growing risks to
economic growth against a lack of obvious progress in lowering inflation
from its pandemic-related surge.
"This debate about exactly where we should go, and then become more
data-dependent, is going to heat up in the last part of the year here,"
St. Louis Fed President James Bullard said in a Reuters interview last
week.
San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly added her voice to that debate on
Friday during an event in Monterey, California. While acknowledging that
high inflation made it "really challenging" for the central bank to step
down from its rate hikes, Daly said "the time is now to start talking
about stepping down. The time is now to start planning for stepping
down."
Investors widely expect the Fed next month to raise its benchmark
overnight interest rate by three-quarters of a percentage point for a
fourth consecutive time, lifting it to a range of 3.75% to 4.00%.
Yet even as markets point to another large increase at the final policy
meeting of the year in December, sentiment is building within the Fed to
take a breather. While the process of raising interest rates is not yet
finished, policymakers feel they may be at the point where further
increases can be smaller in size, and are close to where they can pause
altogether in order to take stock as the economy adjusts to the rapid
change in credit conditions the central bank has set in motion.
That advice has been subtle: In a speech earlier this month, Fed Vice
Chair Lael Brainard offered a list of reasons to be cautious about
further tightening without overtly calling for a slowdown or pause.
It also has been blunt: In comments this week in Virginia, Chicago Fed
President Charles Evans warned of outsized "nonlinear" risks to the
economy if the federal funds rate is lifted much beyond the 4.6% level
officials projected in September that they would reach next year.
"It really does begin to weigh on the economy," Evans said. Even with
the existing rate outlook, it was a "closer call than normal" whether
recession can be avoided.
With that view becoming more full-throated, and more economists saying a
U.S. recession is likely next year, the November meeting may well be
when the Fed signals it is time to slow down - a moment Fed Chair Jerome
Powell said in a Sept. 21 news conference would be approaching "at some
point."
Powell has not spoken publicly about monetary policy since then.
INFLATION SURPRISES
Data on inflation has offered little relief to the Fed. Headline
consumer prices rose in September at an 8.2% annual rate. The U.S.
central bank uses a different inflation measure for its 2% inflation
target, but that remains roughly three times the target.
Job growth continues to be strong, with a still-outsized number of
vacancies compared to the number of jobseekers. Employers say it remains
difficult to find workers.
Yet even some of the Fed's most hawkish voices appear ready to let the
economy have time to catch up with the monetary tightening already
underway.
[to top of second column] |
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell
delivers opening remarks to a "Fed Listens" session in Washington,
U.S., September 23, 2022. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
Bullard told Reuters he also sees a federal funds rate of around
4.6% as a point to pause and take stock, though he'd prefer to get
there by the end of this year with two more 75-basis-point increases
and then let policy evolve in 2023 based on how inflation behaves.
Expectations at the Fed about inflation have begun to settle around
three key points that both buttress the calls for caution on further
rate hikes, but also leave policymakers wanting to keep their
options open.
Inflation, officials acknowledge, has become broader and more
persistent than anticipated, and may be slow to decline. Consumer
prices are weighted towards rents, which are slow to change, and
much of the current inflation is coming from service industries
where price changes are harder to influence.
In economic projections released by the Fed in September, a version
of policymakers' preferred measure of inflation was seen ending 2023
above 3%. Recent staff estimates, recounted in the minutes of the
last Fed meeting, indicated the economy may be much "tighter" than
anticipated as high demand strains against potential output that may
be more limited than thought.
But policymakers also agree the full impact of their rate hikes may
not become clear for months, even as data is starting to show the
seeds of an inflation slowdown taking root. Vehicle prices that
drove the inflation surge in the early part of the pandemic are
falling, and industry executives expect more; month-to-month data
show rents are coming down and the housing industry, a barometer of
other household spending, is slowing rapidly as the average rate on
a 30-year fixed mortgage nears 7%.
Yet, in another point of agreement, risk sentiment among Fed
officials is almost uniformly tilted towards the likelihood of more
inflation surprises to come, putting the group on what some have
described as a hope-for-the-best-prepare-for-the-worst footing. In
September, 17 of 19 officials saw inflation risks as "weighted to
the upside."
In that situation, even if policymakers are ready to be done with
the 75-basis-point rate increases, they won't want the public to
equate smaller future hikes with a true policy "pivot" or a softened
stance on inflation - a tricky point to communicate.
Even more dovish officials like Evans agree monetary policy needs to
hit a more restrictive level and stay there until the back of
inflation is broken. Others agree even if the Fed slows to
half-percentage-point increases after next month's meeting, that
remains fast by recent standards and could quickly push the federal
funds rate to a level of 5% or higher, more in line with rate-hiking
cycles since the 1990s and a level some economists see as needed
before the Fed's work is done.
"How do you step down without giving external observers, financial
markets, the wrong impression?" Evans said. "I think that puts a
premium on explaining where we think we are, what we're expecting
inflation to be doing, and when you're going to be willing to say 'I
think I've got the level of the funds rate that is adequately
restrictive in order to be consistent with inflation coming down.'
It's hard. That's a hard discussion."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Additional reporting by Ann Saphir;
Editing by Dan Burns and Paul Simao)
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