Fed delivers another big rate hike; Powell vows to 'keep at it'
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[September 22, 2022] By
Howard Schneider and Ann Saphir
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Federal Reserve Chair
Jerome Powell vowed on Wednesday that he and his fellow policymakers
would "keep at" their battle to beat down inflation, as the U.S. central
bank hiked interest rates by three-quarters of a percentage point for a
third straight time and signaled that borrowing costs would keep rising
this year.
In a sobering new set of projections, the Fed foresees its policy rate
rising at a faster pace and to a higher level than expected, the economy
slowing to a crawl, and unemployment rising to a degree historically
associated with recessions.
Powell was blunt about the "pain" to come, citing rising joblessness and
singling out the housing market, a persistent source of rising consumer
inflation, as being likely in need of a "correction."
Earlier on Wednesday, the National Association of Realtors reported that
U.S. existing home sales dropped for a seventh straight month in August.
The United States has had a "red hot housing market ... There was a big
imbalance," Powell said in a news conference after Fed policymakers
unanimously agreed to raise the central bank's benchmark overnight
interest rate to a range of 3.00%-3.25%. "What we need is supply and
demand to get better aligned ... We probably in the housing market have
to go through a correction to get back to that place."
That theme, of a continuing mismatch between U.S. demand for goods and
services and the ability of the country to produce or import them, ran
through a briefing in which Powell stuck with the hawkish tone set
during his remarks last month at the Jackson Hole central banking
conference in Wyoming.
Recent inflation data has shown little to no improvement despite the
Fed's aggressive tightening - it also announced 75-basis-point rate
hikes in June and July - and the labor market remains robust with wages
increasing as well.
The federal funds rate projected for the end of this year signals
another 1.25 percentage points in rate hikes to come in the Fed's two
remaining policy meetings in 2022, a level that implies another
75-basis-point increase in the offing.
"The committee is strongly committed to returning inflation to its 2%
objective," the central bank's rate-setting Federal Open Market
Committee said in its policy statement after the end of a two-day policy
meeting.
The Fed "anticipates that ongoing increases in the target range will be
appropriate."
GROWTH SLOWDOWN
The Fed's target policy rate is now at its highest level since 2008 -
and new projections show it rising to the 4.25%-4.50% range by the end
of this year and ending 2023 at 4.50%-4.75%.
Powell said the indicated path of rates showed the Fed was "strongly
resolved" to bring down inflation from the highest levels in four
decades and that officials would "keep at it until the job is done" even
at the risk of unemployment rising and growth slowing to a stall.
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U.S. Federal Reserve Board Chairman
Jerome Powell holds a news conference after Federal Reserve raised
its target interest rate by three-quarters of a percentage point in
Washington, U.S., September 21, 2022. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
"We have got to get inflation behind us," Powell told reporters. "I
wish there were a painless way to do that. There isn't."
Inflation by the Fed's preferred measure has been running at more
than three times the central bank's target. The new projections put
it on a slow path back to 2% in 2025, an extended Fed battle to
quell the highest bout of inflation since the 1980s, and one that
potentially pushes the economy to the borderline of a recession.
The Fed said that "recent indicators point to modest growth in
spending and production," but the new projections put year-end
economic growth for 2022 at 0.2%, rising to 1.2% in 2023, well below
the economy's potential. The unemployment rate, currently at 3.7%,
is projected to rise to 3.8% this year and to 4.4% in 2023. That
would be above the half-percentage-point rise in unemployment that
has been associated with past recessions.
"The Fed was late to recognize inflation, late to start raising
interest rates, and late to start unwinding bond purchases. They've
been playing catch-up ever since. And they're not done yet," said
Greg McBride, chief financial analyst at Bankrate.
U.S. stocks, already mired in a bear market over concerns about the
Fed's monetary policy tightening, ended the day sharply lower, with
the S&P 500 index skidding 1.8%.
In the U.S. Treasury market, which plays a key role in the
transmission of Fed policy decisions into the real economy, yields
on the 2-year note vaulted over the 4% mark, their highest levels
since 2007.
The dollar hit a fresh two-decade high against a basket of
currencies, gaining more than 1%. The U.S. currency's strength - it
has appreciated by more than 16% on a year-to-date basis - has
stoked concern at central banks around the world about potential
exchange rate and other financial shocks.
Some are not even trying to match the Fed's blistering pace of
tightening, with the Bank of Japan on Thursday expected to hold fast
to its ultra-easy policy and keep its policy rate at minus 0.1%,
likely leaving it as the last major monetary policy authority in the
world with a negative policy rate.
Others are making an effort to stay somewhat abreast of the Fed. The
Bank of England, for example, is expected to lift its policy rate by
at least half a percentage point on Thursday.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Additional reporting by Lindsay
Dunsmuir; Editing by Dan Burns and Paul Simao)
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