Fed's Powell previews tougher rate hike path, starting soon
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[March 08, 2023] By
Ann Saphir and Michael S. Derby
(Reuters) - Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell on Tuesday foreshadowed
key elements of the central bank's upcoming rate-setting meeting: A
half-point increase is on the table and updated policymaker forecasts
are likely to feature a high point for rates above the 5.1% in their
last projections in December.
Economic data released since the Fed's last meeting, held Jan. 31-Feb.
1, has surprised consistently to the upside, suggesting the 4.5
percentage points of rate hikes since March 2022 have yet to
sufficiently slow the economy to beat back inflation.
"Nothing about the data suggests to me that we've tightened too much -
indeed, it suggests that we still have work to do," Powell said. "It's
hard to make a case that we've over-tightened. It means we need to
continue to tighten."
Just how high and how fast Powell and his colleagues are willing to go
will hinge on a clutch of key reports between now and the rate-setting
Federal Open Market Committee's March 21-22 meeting, starting with
employment data due this week.
"We have two or three more very important data releases to analyze
before the time of the FOMC meeting," Powell told the Senate Banking
panel Tuesday. He is set to testify to the House of Representatives
Financial Services Committee on Wednesday.
"Those are going to be very important in the assessment we have of this
relatively recent data," he said, noting that if the "totality" of data
warrants, the Fed would be prepared to speed up its rate-hike pace.
The remarks together lay the groundwork for the Fed to keep raising
rates until they touch 6%, and induce a recession along the way, SGH
Macro Advisors' Tim Duy said.
"Powell didn’t open the door to a 50-basis-point rate hike without
intending to follow through with that outcome at the March FOMC
meeting," Duy said. "Only surprisingly weak data will prevent that
outcome now."
The Fed's policy rate is now in a range between 4.50% and 4.75%.
Here's what to watch for between now and March 21 when policymakers
deliver their rate decision in Washington:
JOBS REPORT, DUE FRIDAY
The U.S. Labor Department's last monthly report, published just days
after the Fed delivered its smallest rate hike in a year, showed a gain
of more than half a million jobs in January, though a slowdown in hourly
wage growth tempered concern over the impact on inflation.
Economists estimate 203,000 jobs were added in February, a significant
cooling, but they also expect a return in average hourly earnings growth
to the 4.8% seen in December. That's far above the 3.5% wage growth that
Fed policymakers often point to as being consistent with their 2%
inflation goal.
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Federal Reserve Board Chairman Jerome
Powell holds a news conference in Washington, U.S., November 2,
2022. REUTERS/Elizabeth Frantz/File Photo
Powell said Tuesday the labor market has to soften if inflation is
to recede. He also said he does not expect the rise in the
unemployment rate over the course of this round of rate hikes to be
much more than the one percentage point the Fed estimated in
December.
Economists expect the report to show the unemployment rate, which
was 3.4% in January, rose to 3.5% in February.
INFLATION, DUE MARCH 14
The Bureau of Labor Statistics' consumer price index, the most
widely followed gauge of U.S. inflation, is expected to show a
slight slowdown in price pressures, easing to a month-over-month
gain of 0.4% in February from 0.5% in January.
Either way, that's far above the Fed's goal, which requires an
average monthly CPI gain of under 0.2%, analysts estimate.
Analysts will be particularly focused on the strength of services
not tied to housing, which accounts for a little more than half of
the inflation index. That has remained hot even as goods inflation
has eased.
RETAIL SALES, DUE MARCH 15
Estimates are still preliminary, but economists expect retail sales,
which exploded expectations by rising 3% in January, eased to a 0.2%
gain in February. It's not clear what level of retail sales would be
seen as sufficiently cool for the Fed. Consumer spending makes up
two-thirds of the U.S. economy. The Fed's rate hikes are designed to
slow demand and spending by consumers and businesses.
INFLATION EXPECTATIONS, DUE MARCH 17
An unexpectedly high reading from the University of Michigan on
longer-term consumer inflation expectations last June helped spur
the first of four straight 75-basis-point rate hikes, propelling
what had begun as a more staid round of tightening into the most
aggressive rate-hike campaign since the 1980s.
The survey will next publish on the Friday before the Fed meeting,
and could again prove key. The latest read showed one-year inflation
expectations increased to 4.2%, from 3.9% in January, while the
five-year inflation outlook remained at the bottom of the narrow
2.9-3.1% band that has prevailed for 18 of the last 19 months.
Powell and his colleagues are watching those closely, along with
market-based indications of expectations.
If inflation continues, Powell said Tuesday, at some point both
individuals and businesses "will come to expect high inflation, and
that will make it more self-perpetuating."
(Reporting by Ann Saphir and Michael S. Derby; Editing by Dan Burns
and Leslie Adler)
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