Fed to hold rates steady, but signal policy path in meeting this week
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[September 19, 2023] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Federal Reserve kicks off a two-day
policy meeting on Tuesday with officials widely expected to keep
interest rates on hold for now, but also flagging in new economic
projections whether they feel rates still need to rise further before
the end of the year.
A new policy statement and interest rate decision will be released at 2
p.m. EDT (1800 GMT) on Wednesday, with Fed Chair Jerome Powell scheduled
to hold a press conference at 2:30 p.m. to elaborate.
Investors in contracts tied to the federal funds rate consider it a near
certainty the U.S. central bank will leave the benchmark federal funds
rate at the current range of between 5.25% and 5.5%, a step consistent
with the Fed's shift to a slower and more considered pace of rate
increases.
From March 2022 through May 2023 the Fed raised rates at 10 successive
meetings - by anywhere from a quarter to three quarters of a point - as
it fought the worst rise of inflation since the early 1980s.
In June the Fed paused, but the quarterly economic projections
accompanying that decision showed 12 of 18 policymakers still
anticipated two more quarter-point rate increases by the end of the
year.
One of those came at the July meeting. While the Fed's slower, "data
dependent" pacing may lead officials to skip over September, analysts
say there has been little in recent economic news that would prompt
policymakers to take that last rate increase off the table.
The logic "is partly inertia, as Committee participants might not want
to mess with what's working," said JP Morgan economist Michael Feroli.
Additionally, data since the Fed's last meeting, while generally
supporting the view of slowing inflation alongside continued economic
growth, has been somewhat mixed as the pace of headline price increases
recently jumped.
As of the July meeting "it was still the case...that 'most participants
continued to see significant upside risks to inflation,'" Feroli said,
quoting from the minutes of that meeting. While inflation has slowed
from its peak last year, underlying measures show prices still rising at
about double the Fed's 2% target.
'RISKS ARE SKEWED'
Policymakers, and notably Powell, have also been reluctant to show any
give in their inflation fight, even if it means higher interest rates
than expected and greater risk to an economy that has produced more jobs
and growth than anticipated given the rapid tightening of monetary
policy.
A higher Fed rate leads banks and financial firms to raise their own
rates as well for things like home mortgages, business loans, credit
cards and a variety of other types of financing - discouraging
investment and household spending and, through that drop in demand,
lowering inflation.
[to top of second column] |
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell and New York Federal Reserve
President John Williams walk together, ahead of the Kansas City
Federal Reserve Bank’s annual conference on monetary policy, in
Jackson Hole, Wyoming, U.S., August 22, 2019. REUTERS/Ann Saphir
Closing the door on further rate increases now could lead overall
financial conditions to loosen as markets price for a lower rate
trajectory, the opposite of what the Fed would want while it remains
uncertain inflation has been contained.
The outcome of Wednesday's meeting may already involve a tricky
communications shift, as the Fed manages the approach of what is
likely the end of its rate increases - if policymakers do raise the
policy rate again it would likely come at the November meeting - and
the transition to the time next year when they will likely begin
reducing interest rates as a way to stay in synch with lower
inflation.
Revised economic projections are expected to show more progress on
prices this year and next, causing the inflation-adjusted "real"
rate of interest to gradually move higher unless the policy rate
itself is reduced at the same time.
But how fast and when that occurs remains a matter of debate within
the Fed and depends on how fast inflation falls.
As of June, officials saw the policy rate falling a full percentage
point next year, alongside declining inflation and a rising
unemployment rate, an outlook markets will be parsing closely for
any changes and what that says about the underlying strength of the
economy.
Bank of America analysts expect the Fed may show itself expecting to
cut less next year, perhaps by only three quarters of a point, while
possibly raising slightly the long-term estimate of the neutral
policy rate - a step that would imply the need for slightly tighter
monetary policy over time to put the same level of restraint on
firms and families.
That would reconcile some of the data the Fed has seen this year;
for example, the fact that growth has remained above the central
bank's estimate of the economy's potential despite its rate hikes.
But it may mean rates stay higher for longer than the public
currently expects.
"Recent data should leave the Fed encouraged by ongoing disinflation
but concerned about re-acceleration in inflation because of the
strength in activity," Bank of America economist Michael Gapen and
others wrote, saying that "risks are skewed" for rates to remain
higher than anticipated through 2024.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Andrea
Ricci)
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