Fed can 'hit the mark and hold' with one more rate hike, Bostic says
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[April 14, 2023] By
Howard Schneider
ATLANTA (Reuters) - One more quarter-percentage-point interest rate hike
can allow the Federal Reserve to end its tightening cycle with some
confidence inflation will steadily return to the U.S. central bank's 2%
target, Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic said.
Recent inflation data, including this week's reports of slowing consumer
price increases and falling producer price inflation, "are consistent
with us moving one more time," Bostic told Reuters in an interview on
Thursday. "We've got a lot of momentum suggesting that we're on the path
to 2%."
For now, the Fed is expected to increase rates by a quarter of a
percentage point at its May 2-3 meeting, taking its benchmark overnight
interest rate to the 5.00%-5.25% range, a level not seen since just
before the onset of recession in the fall of 2007.
As of March, when Fed officials most recently updated their projections,
10 policymakers were in agreement with Bostic that one more increase
would likely be the last, with one ready to forego that and pause now,
and seven others seeing a still higher rate as needed to bring inflation
to heel.
In the current situation, Bostic said he felt the aggressive rate
increases of the last year, which pushed the policy rate from the
near-zero level, are only now starting to "bite" on the economy. That's
a good reason to pause after one more rate increase, he said, to study
how the economy and inflation evolve, and try to limit the damage to
growth and jobs.
"There's more to do. I think the next step is going to be to figure out
how much more," Bostic said, noting that inflation remained two to three
times above the Fed's target depending on the measure used.
But "I think the point of 'hit the mark and hold' is 'hit the mark and
hold,' unless you see a trend that is unmistakable, that is going in a
way that makes you uncomfortable," he said, referring to Fed plans to
reach a tight enough level of interest rates and leave them unchanged
for a potentially extended period of time while inflation declines.
'HAD TO DOWNSHIFT'
The Atlanta Fed chief spoke in detail about how the recent turmoil in
banking markets buffeted his monetary policy views.
At first, high inflation made him open to a half-percentage-point
increase at the March 21-22 Fed meeting. But going into the session,
which ended with policymakers raising rates by 25 basis points, he was
considering abandoning rate hikes altogether, a sentiment shared by
several of his colleagues, according to recently released minutes of the
session.
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Raphael Bostic, president of the Federal
Reserve Bank of Atlanta, poses for a photo in Knoxville, Tennessee,
U.S., March 23 2018. REUTERS/Ann Saphir
Between the failure of Silicon Valley Bank on March 10, the collapse
of Signature Bank soon after, and the forced merger of Credit Suisse
on the eve of the Fed meeting, "I kind of had to downshift a bit and
say, 'I gotta have a hold or pause on the table because we're in the
midst of this chaos,'" Bostic said.
Yet like many of his colleagues, Bostic said he became convinced at
the meeting, and more so since, that recent bank stress will not
cause a dramatic blow to lending or a deeper-than-anticipated
economic slowdown.
Indeed, Bostic sketched out why he still believes the inflation
battle can be won without a recession or even much of a rise in the
unemployment rate.
It's an outlook that is given increasingly narrow chances by
investors who see Fed rate cuts ahead, by U.S. central bank staff
who project a recession will be underway by the end of the year, and
by Bostic's colleagues who see the unemployment rate rising a full
percentage point to 4.5% by the end of this year.
In contrast, Bostic said he thinks the unemployment won't need to
rise above 4%, while the economy can continue growing, even if only
slowly, at about a 1% annual rate.
The logic?
"It's the pandemic," he said, attributing continued consumer demand,
and the strong hiring that flows from it, as the result of
distortions in the economy from the trillions of dollars of
government support rolled out during the COVID-19 health crisis.
Those distortions should ease over time without, he feels,
destroying the economy's momentum altogether or requiring massive
labor "slack" for inflation to fall.
People and businesses "are sitting in a financial condition that is
abnormal, and abnormal in a way that would drive excess
consumption," Bostic said. "That abnormality has not worked itself
through the economy."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Paul Simao)
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