Fed's Williams douses Wall Street's rate-cut speculation
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[December 16, 2023] By
Michael S. Derby and Howard Schneider
(Reuters) -Just days after a Federal Reserve meeting that penciled in an
ample course of interest rate cuts next year, which in turn unleashed a
broad rally in financial markets, one of the U.S. central bank's top
policymakers pushed back on the ebullience on Friday.
"We aren't really talking about rate cuts right now," New York Fed
President John Williams said in an interview with CNBC. When it comes to
the question of lowering rates, "I just think it's just premature to be
even thinking about that" as the central bank continues to mull whether
monetary policy is in the right place to help guide inflation back to
its 2% target, he said.
Williams was the first Fed official to speak in the wake of a policy
meeting this week in which the central bank left its benchmark overnight
interest rate unchanged in the 5.25%-5.50% range. With rates steady, the
big shift in the Fed outlook was tied to projections of an easing of
monetary policy next year.
Fed officials' forecasts collectively priced in three-quarters of a
percentage point in cuts in 2024, which would leave the policy rate in
the 4.50%-4.75% range by the end of 2024. Those forecasts summarize the
views of policymakers and are not an official Fed view, but they are
nevertheless closely watched and the numbers helped spur sharp drops in
bond yields while driving stock prices up.
In a press conference following the two-day meeting, Fed Chair Jerome
Powell on Wednesday acknowledged the shift in views, explained how the
forecasts work, while acknowledging "the question of when will it become
appropriate to begin dialing back the amount of policy restraint in
place, that begins to come into view, and is clearly a topic of
discussion out in the world and also a discussion for us at our meeting
today."
'CLARIFY' THE MESSAGE
Some market observers saw in Williams' appearance an attempt to reframe
the message that markets took from both the policy meeting and Powell's
comments to reporters.
Williams' interview appears "intended to lean against speculation on a
March cut without ruling it out, and slow the sense in markets of a Fed
rush towards cutting following Powell's very dovish December press
conference," Evercore ISI analysts said.
"Deploying the N.Y. Fed president in this manner is standard practice
when the Fed leadership wants to 'clarify' the message, but market
pricing moved only modestly in response to his comments, reflecting
investor conviction that the data is moving in support of earlier/deeper
cuts."
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John Williams, Chief Executive Officer of the Federal Reserve Bank
of New York, speaks at an event in New York, U.S., November 6, 2019.
REUTERS/Carlo Allegri/File Photo
Futures markets briefly fluttered in the wake of Williams' comments
but continued to settle on March as the point at which the central
bank will start cutting rates. CME Group's FedWatch Tool maintained
a strong probability of a March cut, with views fragmented on the
path of cuts after that.
In an interview with Reuters later on Friday, Atlanta Fed President
Raphael Bostic also presented a monetary policy outlook partially at
odds with the market's stance, projecting the possibility of a rate
cut in the third quarter of next year.
Bostic, who will be a voting member of the central bank's
policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee in 2024, said he
thought inflation, as measured by the personal consumption
expenditures price index, would end next year at around 2.4%, which
would be enough progress towards the Fed's 2% target to warrant two
quarter-percentage-point rate cuts during the second half of 2024.
When it comes to easing, "I'm not really feeling that this is an
imminent thing," Bostic said, with policymakers still needing
"several months" to accumulate enough data and confidence that
inflation will continue to fall before moving away from the policy
rate's current range.
Meanwhile, in an interview with the Wall Street Journal, Chicago Fed
President Austan Goolsbee said it is increasingly likely the central
bank will need to shift its attention from inflation to employment,
the other part of its dual mandate. He also told the newspaper he
wouldn't rule out a rate cut in March.
Against all the talk around the prospect of lowering rates, Williams
reminded markets that the Fed could still go the other way.
When it comes to the economy, "the base case is looking pretty good:
Inflation is coming down, the economy remains strong and
unemployment is low." That said, "one thing we've learned, even over
the past year, is that the data can move in surprising ways," he
said, adding "we need to be ready to move further if inflation, the
progress of inflation were to stall or reverse."
(Reporting by Michael S. Derby; Editing by Paul Simao)
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