Fed poised to punt rate hike into the summer wind
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[June 14, 2023] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Federal Reserve is expected to leave interest
rates unchanged on Wednesday for the first time since the U.S. central
bank kicked off a historically aggressive round of monetary policy
tightening in March of 2022.
But don't call it a pivot or a pause.
Policymakers at the end of their two-day meeting may well signal more
rate increases are still to come once they take time to assess how the
economy is evolving, whether the financial system remains stable, and if
inflation is continuing to fall.
"We probably need a little more tightening, but it is not clear how
much," said Blerina Uruci, chief U.S. economist in the fixed income
division at T. Rowe Price Associates, noting that despite strength in
recent employment and core inflation reports, a "nuanced" reading of the
data showed both may be set to weaken.
"When there is this much uncertainty it makes sense to proceed
cautiously," she said.
The Fed is scheduled to release its policy statement and new quarterly
economic projections at 2 p.m. EDT (1800 GMT). Fed Chair Jerome Powell
will hold a press conference half an hour later.
A sense of caution about the economy competing with ongoing inflation
concerns has led the Fed to this point, on the verge of what analysts
are calling a "hawkish skip."
While likely to forego an increase in borrowing costs after 10
consecutive hikes that have pushed the benchmark overnight interest rate
to the current 5.00%-5.25% range, Fed policymakers at the same time are
expected to show both in their language and projections that one or
perhaps two more quarter-percentage-point hikes will still be needed by
the end of 2023.
POLICY COMPROMISE
Data since the last Fed meeting in early May has left policymakers with
a tough set of signals to read, and ample room for debate.
The economy continues to generate strong monthly job and wage gains, and
one of the U.S. central bank's more closely watched measures - the ratio
of open jobs to the number of unemployed - rose recently in a sign the
labor market remains misaligned between the demand for workers and those
available.
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The Federal Reserve building is pictured
in Washington, U.S., on March 19, 2019. REUTERS/Leah Millis/File
Photo
Inflation is declining only slowly, with some aspects of it
proving more persistent than anticipated. The closely watched
Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index excluding food and
energy has not improved much this year, and as of April was
increasing at a 4.7% annual rate, more than double the Fed's 2%
target.
Yet some forward-looking price measures show inflation may be set to
fall sharply in coming months; the unemployment rate jumped
significantly, from 3.4% to 3.7%, in May; and the year-to-year
growth rate in bank lending is plummeting towards zero, part of a
credit slowdown the Fed is watching carefully for signs of financial
industry stress.
The expected policy outcome reflects a compromise born of some
uncertainty around what it all means, with those Fed officials
worried the economy may weaken fast getting at least a six-week
timeout until the July 25-26 meeting, and those concerned about
still-high inflation readings knowing the central bank will remain
primed to move rates higher if price pressures do not relent.
The decision won't mean rate hikes are in for an extended pause, or
- a point Powell is likely to emphasize - that rate cuts are
anticipated anytime soon.
The Fed's last set of quarterly projections anticipated the
benchmark overnight interest rate would only move down by the end of
2024 as inflation also declined - movements that keep the
inflation-adjusted rate of interest roughly the same. A true "pivot"
towards looser policy was only seen occurring in 2025, when the
policy rate was projected by year's end to decline more than
inflation.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Paul Simao)
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