Fed prepares to update racing odds as inflation bucks the reins
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[September 19, 2022] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Federal Reserve,
after chasing inflation for the better part of a year, will look ahead
as far as 2025 in new projections this week that will show more fully
the depth and length of the economic "pain" its policymakers expect to
be needed to stop the current surge in prices.
The tale so far is not a pretty one.
The pace of price increases, which by the Fed's preferred measure are
running at more than three times its 2% target, have hardly budged in
the face of the most rapid set of U.S. interest rate increases in about
30 years.
The projections, due to be published alongside the Fed's latest policy
statement at 2 p.m. EDT (1800 GMT) on Wednesday, will show just how
aggressively U.S. central bank officials feel interest rates must rise
to respond to the inflationary wave, and what economic cracks they see
appearing as a result in terms of slower growth or higher unemployment.
Hopes for a "soft landing," marked by a slowdown in inflation toward the
2% target without a recession, may not be gone: Policymakers are
unlikely to project an outright downturn even as the outlooks compiled
each September extend an additional year, in this case through 2025.
Outside the Fed, however, there is a growing sense that the path to a
soft landing is unlikely. Some analysts estimate the unemployment rate,
which hit 3.7% in August, may need to rise as high as 7.5%.
Traders in contracts tied to the Fed's benchmark overnight interest rate
now expect that rate to end the year between 4.25% and 4.50% - 2
percentage points higher than where it is now and a level last seen in
late 2007.
"The probability of a softish landing falls materially" after U.S.
inflation data for August showed just how persistent rising prices have
become, Evercore ISI Vice Chairman Krishna Guha wrote last week. "Even
assuming ... it is still possible to bring inflation down ... without a
proper recession, the data and the response it will provoke
substantially increases the risk that the Fed ends up overshooting badly
and causing a recession anyway," with the policy rate perhaps hitting as
high as 5.00%.
AN END IN SIGHT?
The updated economic projections will give the clearest indication yet
of Fed policymakers' sense of the endpoint for rates, key information
for investors trying to value assets or homebuyers wondering what a
mortgage might cost next year.
Some officials have lately shied away from discussing the issue in
detail, wary of setting expectations and then having to shift gears. The
new projections, though, will include anonymous estimates from each
official for where the policy rate should be at the end of 2022 and the
following three years. The so-called "dot plot" of estimates from the
seven members of the Fed's Board of Governors and 12 regional bank
presidents also includes outlooks for unemployment, inflation, and
economic growth.
As long as inflation continues to move sideways rather than downwards,
however, they face a dilemma over whether to raise interest rates to
levels even higher than currently foreseen, or hope the increases
already flagged will eventually do the job.
PATIENCE OR A FINAL SPRINT?
The bias for now may be towards patience. A rate hike of three-quarters
of a percentage point on Wednesday, which is what markets widely expect,
would be the third consecutive "unusually large" increase in a row.
Officials have said at some point they will slow the pace to take stock
of how the economy is responding to the sharp rises in borrowing costs.
[to top of second column] |
Federal Reserve Board Chair Jerome
Powell speaks during a news conference following a two-day meeting
of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) in Washington, U.S.,
July 27, 2022. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz
"A $20 trillion economy does not turn on a dime," Carl Riccadonna,
chief U.S. economist for BNP Paribas, said in a call with reporters
last week. Despite inflation's "stickiness," he said, "the punchbowl
indeed is being drained," an old metaphor for central bank rate
hikes that make financial conditions tighter for homeowners,
businesses and investors.
"It was some very strong punch, so it is going to take some time for
the effects to fully percolate through. But monetary policy is
heading into restrictive territory."Some evidence of that is already
in sight, with the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate topping 6%
last week, having doubled in a year, and U.S. equities investors
being pummeled by a bear market.
The question for Fed policymakers is just how "restrictive" rates
need to be to control inflation, and how they'll know they've hit
that point given the impact of the rate hikes may not be felt for
months.
The projections released three months ago mapped out a largely
benign path, with the policy rate seen ending next year at about
3.8% and inflation by the Fed's preferred measure falling to about
2.6%.
The 1.2-percentage-point difference between the two, the so-called
"real" or inflation-adjusted federal funds rate, showed the Fed
bowing to the need for tighter policy. Anything beyond roughly half
a percentage point is considered restrictive.
But that slight tapping on the brakes was seen as adequate to bring
inflation down, with the unemployment rate projected to rise to just
3.9% in 2023 and to 4.1% in 2024, while gross domestic product
growth remained at 1.7%, near what the Fed considers as the long-run
trend.
The disappointing progress on inflation since then, however, led Fed
Chair Jerome Powell to say last month that getting prices under
control would mean "a sustained period of below-trend growth" and a
"softening" labor market - a sign the upcoming projections may show
at least a bumpy landing if not an outright crash.
At the very least, data over the summer has eaten more months off a
clock that Powell said is "ticking" towards the day when price and
wage increases become embedded and self-reinforcing, public
confidence in the Fed erodes, and the central bank is forced into
the sort of shock tactics meant to trigger a sharp economic
contraction.
That moment may not be here yet. Household and market measures of
inflation expectations, important to how the Fed views its
likelihood of success, have remained under control - and recently
fell in two important surveys.
But inflation eventually will have to move for the Fed to change
course.
The June projection of a 5.2% inflation rate by the end of this year
is likely to be revised higher, measures of inflation's persistence
have grown, and policymakers have made clear they won't shift course
easily.
Having waited to begin raising interest rates, only to see inflation
accelerate, "the consequences of being fooled by a temporary
softening in inflation could be even greater now if another
misjudgment damages the Fed's credibility," Fed Governor Christopher
Waller said recently.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Paul Simao)
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