Fed's Daly: two more US rate hikes a 'very reasonable' projection
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[June 24, 2023] By
Ann Saphir
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Two more U.S. interest-rate hikes this year is
a "very reasonable" projection, San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank
President Mary Daly said, but given how fast rates have risen already
and how close they are to where they probably need to be, it's better to
move more slowly and carefully than before.
"It is, in my judgment, prudent policy... to slow the pace of policy as
you near the destination," Daly told Reuters in an interview late on
Thursday.
Unlike last year, when the risk that inflation could spiral out of
control trumped that of slowing the economy more than needed, the risks
of doing too little on rates versus doing too much are now "about
balanced," she said.
"I want to make sure that we balance those risks on both sides, of
under- or over-tightening," Daly said. "Adding another six weeks to our
decision space, to me that seems optimal, and prudent."
Last week Fed policymakers decided to hold the policy rate steady at the
current 5%-5.25% range, interrupting what had been a string of 10
straight increases aimed at stomping inflation. But with slow progress
on easing price pressures, a majority of Fed policymakers also believe
that the rate will need to get to 5.5%-5.75% before the end of the year.
To Daly, the decision continues a slowdown in the Fed's rate hike pace
already underway, as the central bank went from hiking in 75-basis-point
increments for much of last year, to a half-point hike in December, and
quarter-point hikes this year.
As for what's next on the immediate horizon - the Fed's meeting in late
July - Daly remains uncommitted. It will depend on what she learns from
community and business contacts, as well as from official economic data.
"I want to maintain optionality, because I think that's prudent."
Daly said her community advisory council and other business contacts
have told her their biggest issues are too-high inflation, and ongoing
labor shortages.
Inflation by the Fed's preferred measure, the personal consumption
expenditures index, is running at 4.4%, down from the peak last summer
of 7% but still more than twice the Fed's 2% target. The unemployment
rate has crept up to 3.7% but is lower than the 4% rate Fed policymakers
estimate is consistent with a fully employed American workforce on a
sustainable basis.
"Right now we are really missing on our price stability goal, and that
miss is not trivial," Daly said
"What I want to do, while we resolutely work to restore price stability
- give these people back some peace of mind, and lives and livelihoods -
is make sure we are doing it as carefully as we can so we don't end up
inadvertently, in our rush to do it today, trip the economy up into an
unforced error."
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San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank
President Mary Daly poses at the bank’s headquarters in San
Francisco, California, U.S., July 16, 2019. REUTERS/Ann Saphir/File
Photo
Also on people's minds, she said, is the worry that the housing
market has bottomed and rents are potentially reaccelerating.
Still, she said, other data suggests inflation is headed in the
right direction, with declines in both the frequency and magnitude
of price changes by businesses, and a decline in short-term
inflation expectations.
Banks, meanwhile, are being "thoughtful" about their lending and
"careful" about their balance sheets, she said. While credit
tightening so far is still consistent with what she would have
expected just from a higher Fed policy rate, she said, she is still
mindful that it could worsen in a delayed effect from the banking
turmoil this past spring.
That's one more reason, she said, to slow down on rate hikes.
"Taking a slower pace as we approach our destination ...means we
save many Americans from us either stopping short and wishing we had
done more, or going too far and wishing we had done less," Daly
said.
Compared with projections made in March, Fed policymakers see faster
growth, a smaller rise in the unemployment rate, and a shallower
drop in inflation, all reflections of generally
stronger-than-expected data since then.
"No wonder there's a couple of extra rate hikes," Daly said. "More
tightening may be required to get the economy sustainably back into
balance. But do I know that? No....we are going to have to find the
terminal rate by looking at the data."
Two more quarter-point rate hikes this year, Daly said, is "a very
reasonable projection at this point," she said. "But no decision,
for me, has been made."
"If I knew that we needed to raise, and I was really confident in
that, then I would of course have proposed something different, have
supported something different," at the Fed's June meeting, she
added. "But I've been a strong proponent of standing pat and dialing
back the pace, and that's because as we near the destination we
become less certain, without more data, about what needs to be
done."
(Reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by Dan Burns and Andrea Ricci)
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