With rate hikes likely done, Fed turns to timing of cuts
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[December 14, 2023] By
Howard Schneider and Ann Saphir
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Federal Reserve left interest rates unchanged
on Wednesday and U.S. central bank chief Jerome Powell said the historic
tightening of monetary policy is likely over as inflation falls faster
than expected and with a discussion of cuts in borrowing costs coming
"into view."
"People are not writing down rate hikes" in their latest economic
projections, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said in a press conference
following the end of the central bank's final policy meeting of the
year.
"That's us thinking we've done enough," he said, adding that rate
increases were "not the base case anymore."
"The Fed is done!" exclaimed Diane Swonk, chief economist at KPMG US,
and if economic data continues evolving as it has, with inflation
cooling alongside an economy that seems poised to slow but not crash,
then "the Fed will be cutting sooner" rather than later in the year.
Indeed, the shift in outlook was stark, with 17 of 19 Fed policymakers
seeing rates lower by the end of 2024, and none seeing them higher. A
measure of policymakers' perceptions of risks facing the economy also
moved closer to balance, a point Powell alluded to when he said the
central bank was now at the point where "both mandates are important,"
with officials sensitive to the risk of "overdoing it" and pushing the
economy into a faster than necessary slowdown.
The Fed is statutorily responsible for maintaining stable prices and
maximum employment, two economic goals that are sometimes in conflict.
After inflation erupted to a 40-year high last year, Powell said
officials thought they now were zeroing in on an elusive "soft landing,"
with inflation returning to the Fed's 2% target in an economy that is
slowing but not crashing, and one in which unemployment remains low.
"We are seeing strong growth that ... appears to be moderating. We are
seeing a labor market that is coming back into balance ... We're seeing
inflation making real progress," Powell told reporters. "These are the
things we've been wanting to see ... Declaring victory would be
premature ... But of course the question is 'when will it become
appropriate to begin dialing back?'"
It's a debate that will preoccupy the Fed and investors in the weeks and
months to come after two years in which it first scaled back the asset
purchases it used to support the economy through the coronavirus
pandemic, and then, beginning in March 2022, rapidly raised its
benchmark policy interest rate from the near-zero level to the current
5.25%-5.50% range.
U.S. stocks jumped after the release of the Fed's latest statement and
policymakers' updated quarterly economic projections, continued climbing
during Powell's press conference and closed sharply higher, with the S&P
500 index gaining about 1.4% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average
hitting a record closing high. The U.S. dollar dropped against a basket
of currencies and U.S. Treasury yields fell.
[to top of second column] |
U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell holds a press conference
after the release of the Fed policy decision to leave interest rates
unchanged, at the Federal Reserve in Washington, U.S, September 20,
2023. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File Photo
Traders of futures contracts that settle to the Fed's policy rate
are pricing in a March start to rate cuts and an end-of-2024 policy
rate 1.5 percentage points below the current level.
'SO FAR, SO GOOD'
For an institution that has been reluctant to declare victory over
inflation, the updated projections and Powell's tone marked a
notable shift.
Headline personal consumption expenditures inflation is seen ending
2023 at 2.8% and falling further to 2.4% by the end of next year,
within striking distance of the Fed's 2% target.
That comes at little comparative cost in terms of higher
joblessness, with the unemployment rate seen rising from the current
3.7% to 4.1%, the same rate projected in September, while economic
growth is seen slowing from an estimated 2.6% this year to 1.4% over
2024.
"It's so far, so good," Powell said.
While officials remain free to raise the Fed's benchmark overnight
interest rate again in coming months if there is a resurgence in
price pressures, that seems increasingly unlikely given the recent
performance of inflation that has edged steadily towards the central
bank's target.
Some analysts and investors even interpreted Wednesday's events as
the effective start of a Fed easing cycle.
The bond market took Powell's message and ran with it. The yield on
the 2-year Treasury note, which is tied closely to Fed policy rate
expectations, plunged by 30 basis points - essentially delivering a
rate cut to the open market.
Over the last eight weeks, moreover, the yield on the 10-year
Treasury note, which is instrumental to setting mortgage rates and
other key borrowing costs, has tumbled by roughly 1 percentage
point, a move rarely seen outside of economic emergencies.
"For a group that prizes the pricing of its policy intentions in the
forward markets ... they had to know that moving the median forecast
... would be a bullish signal," Steven Blitz, chief U.S. economist
at TS Lombard, wrote in an analysis headlined "The Fed Eases."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Additional reporting by Ann Saphir,
Michael S. Derby, Saqib Ahmed and Lindsay Dunsmuir; Editing by Paul
Simao)
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