Fed's rate-cut foot-dragging grates on global peers at IMF meetings
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[April 19, 2024] By
Marcela Ayres, Leika Kihara and Karin Strohecker
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Finance chiefs from economies large and small are
scrambling to keep pace with the Federal Reserve's rapid resetting of
rate-cut expectations as U.S. inflation data roils markets from London
to Brazil.
All insist they are setting policy independently of the Fed and basing
it on local conditions. But those conditions are now being buffeted by a
sudden likelihood of U.S. interest rates staying higher for longer than
had been expected as the year began after a run of hotter-than-expected
inflation data.
It's an unexpected turn that has supercharged the U.S. dollar, stressing
other currencies in return and raising the prospect of currency
intervention in Asia. It has also forced Latin American central bankers
to tailor their rate-cut plans, and even left officials in developed
countries wondering whether new constraints on their own easing plans
may emerge.
"When the March (U.S. inflation data) scare came, there was a drastic
reversal of expectations, and this changed the mood significantly
regarding how economic variables will behave worldwide," Brazil's
Finance Minister Fernando Haddad said in a press conference in
Washington on Thursday on the sidelines of the International Monetary
Fund and World Bank spring meetings.
"Everything else depends somewhat on this."
The dollar's 4.75% appreciation against a basket of currencies this year
is creating headaches in many quarters of the globe, but its gains of
9.6% against Japan's yen and 6.5% versus South Korea's won have been
especially troublesome for two key U.S. trading partners. Those moves
led officials from Japan and South Korea this week to huddle urgently
with U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen in hopes of stemming the
slides, holding out the possibility of intervention if needed.
Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda said the Japanese central bank may
raise interest rates again if the yen's declines significantly push up
inflation, highlighting the impact currency moves may have on the timing
of the next policy shift.
"Policymakers outside the U.S. are trying to address the recent weakness
in (developed and emerging market) currencies in one of two ways - by
suggesting possible FX intervention, and by tilting central bank
rhetoric in a more 'hawkish' direction," Thierry Wizman, global FX and
rates strategist at Macquarie, wrote in a note. "Japan is trying both."
'NO URGENCY'
Roughly two weeks ago, global central bankers, finance ministers and
capital markets had been in broad agreement that the world's most
important policy-setting central bank would shepherd them all down a
path of looser credit starting in June.
It was a pivot by the Fed eagerly anticipated around the world,
especially among smaller, debt-laden economies with limited ability to
control their own borrowing costs or contain disruptive swings in their
currencies.
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Storm clouds gather over the U.S. Federal Reserve Building before an
evening thunderstorm in Washington June 9, 2006. REUTERS/Jim
Bourg/File Photo
A raft of U.S. economic data unfriendly to that aspiration has since
intruded on that consensus, and Fed officials who four weeks ago had
conditioned the world to expect a string of three,
quarter-percentage-point rate cuts this year have changed their
tune.
"I definitely don't feel urgency to cut interest rates" given the
strength of the economy, New York Fed President John Williams said
at an event on the sidelines of the IMF and World Bank meetings. "I
think eventually ... interest rates will need to be lower at some
point, but the timing of that is driven by the economy."
Williams, the influential vice chair of the U.S. central bank's
rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee, was only the latest
official to have suddenly turned squeamish about a turn to rate cuts
after data showed the U.S. economy motoring at an unexpectedly brisk
pace through the first quarter and inflation in particular proving
to be unhelpfully sticky.
IMF officials urged Asian central banks to stick to their own
knitting and avoid the temptation to lash their policy decisions too
closely to anticipated moves by the Fed.
"If central banks follow the Fed too closely, they could undermine
price stability in their own countries," Krishna Srinivasan, the
director of the IMF's Asia and Pacific Department, said during a
briefing on the region's outlook.
The European Central Bank for one seems determined to heed that
advice and press ahead with its own plans for a first rate cut in
June regardless of the Fed's reluctance.
"We need to recognize that and conduct monetary policy according to
euro zone data," Bank of Portugal Governor Mario Centeno told
Reuters. "If that means we need to cut interest rates before the
United States, so be it."
Meanwhile, Pakistan Finance Minister Muhammad Aurangzeb, struck a
sanguine tone even as he pursued talks with the IMF over a new loan
program expected to be at least $6 billion.
"The Fed needs to make the decision based on what they see in their
inflation trajectory here (in the U.S.) - but overall around the
world, most of the central banks are looking to start cutting
rates," he told Reuters in an interview. "Maybe some short-term
pressure - but do I see it as a big concern in the medium term? No."
(Reporting by Marcela Ayres, Leika Kihara and Howard Schneider in
Washington; additional reporting by Francesco Canepa in Washington
and Michael S. Derby in New York; Writing by Dan Burns and Howard
Schneider; Editing by Paul Simao)
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