Confounding US economic, inflation data muddy Fed's rate path
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[April 25, 2024] By
Howard Schneider
(Reuters) - The Federal Reserve's latest financial stability report was
good news for anyone worried that a record run of interest rate hikes
might overstress the banking system or trigger a recession with
companies and households pushed into default through a broad credit
crackdown.
None of that is happening.
Instead, the Fed is wrestling with an economy that has sloughed off
tight monetary policy to such a degree that U.S. central bank officials
are without a clear view of what to expect and divided over issues like
productivity, the economy's underlying potential, and even whether the
current policy interest rate is as restrictive as imagined when they
called off further hikes.
Rate cuts that seemed certain to begin early in 2024 now seem on hold
until at least September, with a risk of sliding even later in the year
or into 2025 as inflation remains sticky.
A wave of tight credit seems to have come and gone - bank lending is
growing, corporate credit spreads are narrow, and household balance
sheets are largely healthy - with the economy still growing at above its
potential and adding jobs. A recently updated Fed index of overall
financial conditions showed there was virtually no impact on economic
growth right now from the central bank's monetary policy or the broader
credit conditions it is intended to influence.
Contrary to Fed officials assessment that policy is restrictive, current
credit conditions in the economy are "consistent with above-trend
growth. That tells me that the transmission of monetary policy to the
real economy in the U.S. has been much less effective" than elsewhere,
said Joe Kalish, chief global macro strategist at Ned Davis Research.
Fed officials themselves are unsettled on whether they still need the
economy to slow for inflation to fall, or whether the "immaculate"
influence of productivity and other factors will do the job, an
important issue since one view leans towards tighter policy and the
other towards easing. The release of key inflation data on Friday is
expected to show the Fed's preferred measure of price pressures remained
well above the central bank's 2% target, a possible sign that progress
has stalled.
It is a situation that may have left the Fed professing data-dependence
but running largely on intuition and instinct in deciding whether the
U.S. has found a new equilibrium of higher growth and lower
unemployment, or needs more pressure from the central bank to be sure
inflation eases.
With doubt about the role of wages in driving inflation, whether more
demand needs to be squeezed from the economy, and controversy over the
level of interest rates that might do the job if so, "there is no clear
inflation framework and no clear set of parameters to assess the stance
of policy," said Ed Al-Hussainy, a senior analyst with the global rates
and currency team at Columbia Threadneedle Investments. "The
'policy-is-restrictive' judgment has to come from somewhere ... They've
really struggled to articulate it."
NOT AS TIGHT AS THOUGHT
The intellectual shocks have been deep in recent years, from a surprise
boost in immigration that bolstered U.S. labor supply to the partial
unwinding of globalization and a reallocation of consumer spending
towards services. Unlike past tight policy eras the housing market won't
buckle and has been driving inflation of late. There is rekindled
concern about the influence of massive federal deficits on financial
markets, and open questions about productivity and the "neutral" rate of
interest used to guide whether policy is tight or not.
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The Federal Reserve building stands in Washington April 3, 2012.
REUTERS/Joshua Roberts/File Photo
Gross domestic product figures due to be released on Thursday are
expected to show the economy expanded at a 2.4% annual rate through
the first three months of the year, according to a Reuters poll of
economists, marking yet another quarter in which GDP has grown
faster than the 1.8% rate Fed officials set nearly eight years ago
as their median estimate of the economy's non-inflationary growth
potential.
The U.S. has fallen short of that mark in only five of the 30
quarters since then, and two of those were associated with the onset
of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The puzzle: Whether economic potential is higher than thought, with
ongoing strong growth possible without high inflation, or whether
growth in recent years has been buoyed by a series of "temporary"
jolts - from tax cuts during the Trump administration, for example,
or federal transfers and infrastructure spending under President Joe
Biden - that could mean faster price increases and higher rates of
interest.
Joseph H. Davis, global chief economist at Vanguard, said in a
recent study that federal debt and an aging population had driven
the neutral rate of interest higher by perhaps a percentage point,
meaning Fed policy isn't as tight as thought. That would help
explain the ongoing growth, but also make it harder to lower
inflation.
"When you zoom out, the evidence is building that the Federal
Reserve is not as restrictive as they think," said Davis, who at
this point expects the central bank won't cut rates at all this
year. "You can infer by financial conditions, the labor market,
inflation - you look at all three and the neutral rate is higher ...
If someone had been asleep for 10 years, you'd wonder why there was
strong conviction in an easing cycle" given how the economy is
performing.
Fed officials at this point say they are content to wait and see
whether the 5.25%-5.50% range set in July coaxes inflation back to
the 2% target, and are not contemplating further hikes in the policy
rate. With the rate again likely to be held steady at the Fed's
policy meeting next week, observers will look for some clue in
either the last Fed statement or in Fed Chair Jerome Powell's press
conference about where things are heading.
Powell may be the first to admit he isn't sure.
"At some point they sort of threw up their hands and they sort of
abandoned the idea that they were going to be able to predict" the
path of inflation and the economy given how much is in flux, said
Luke Tilley, chief economist at Wilmington Trust.
"They said there would have to be pain ... Then they said jobs are
good and growth is good, we just want good inflation numbers,"
Tilley said. "They are having a very hard time understanding it."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Paul Simao)
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