Fed cautious on a rate cut case that has yet to be made
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[February 24, 2024] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Federal Reserve officials, facing economic
conditions they say lack any clear historical parallel to guide them,
continued pushing back this week against a near-term start to interest
rate cuts, instead building the case for caution before making a move
they are struggling to justify.
A run of high-profile speeches on Thursday added emphasis to the
previous day's hawkish readout of January's policy meeting that bundled
together have further shaken investors' confidence that borrowing costs
will fall soon.
Coming also on the heels of recent higher-than-expected inflation
readings, policymakers put an open-ended formulation around the timing
of their first rate cut, with Vice Chair Philip Jefferson saying it was
likely but "later this year."
Fed governors Lisa Cook and Christopher Waller later reiterated the
now-familiar refrain of needing greater confidence that inflation is on
track to return to the Fed's 2% target before agreeing to rate cuts.
Waller spoke of being in "no rush" to cut rates given the latest
"hotter-than-expected" readings of employment, economic growth and
inflation. Cook, meanwhile, was explicit about her "growing confidence
that inflation will continue to ease," but also said she needed more
proof of that before cutting rates.
Investors have struggled to stay abreast, but have now pushed back
expectations of an initial rate cut to June.
"As strong activity data have piled up, Fed officials have become less
concerned about the risk of keeping the funds rate too high for too
long," Goldman Sachs economists wrote on Thursday night as they pushed
their rate cut call from May to June.
DEEPER QUANDARY
Policymakers' remarks reflect the near consensus at their Jan. 30-31
meeting that, even after a year when inflation declined at a historic
pace and by many measures seems set to fall further, the time still
wasn't right to signal the start of rate cuts. "Most participants,"
according to meeting minutes, were still focused on the risk that
premature rate reductions might allow inflation to rise again and force
a damaging policy response to erase it.
But the recent commentary also points to a deeper quandary that may be
tilting Fed officials toward further delay.
The benchmark overnight interest rate has been at 5.25%-5.5% for nearly
seven months, still less than the roughly 10-month average rate "hold"
in Fed policy cycles since the mid-1990s.
Officials know what they gain for each month they wait: More downward
pressure on prices through borrowing costs they regard as restrictive,
more data to show how inflation is behaving, and more confidence they
have the situation under control.
For now they neither feel they are paying a price in lost jobs or
economic potential for keeping rates where they are nor do they know
what they'd gain by cutting them. The economy has held up better than
expected in the face of the fastest interest rate increases since the
1980s. If anything that has contributed to uncertainty about whether it
reacts to interest rates in the same way it used to - whether financial
conditions are, in fact, as restrictive as policymakers believe.
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Flags fly over the Federal Reserve building on a windy day in
Washington, U.S., May 26, 2017. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo
One initial argument for rate cuts - that Fed policy should follow
inflation lower in order to keep "real" borrowing costs from rising
- has now been discounted.
Jefferson, asked Thursday why he did not mention the issue as a
factor in the rate discussion, said he was only focused on whether
supply and demand in the economy appeared to be coming into balance
- a view aligned with Fed Chair Jerome Powell's distaste for
unobserved economic parameters, like the "neutral" rate of interest,
as a guide to policy.
NO RUSH
At his last press conference Powell said the Fed wouldn't "wait
around for the economy to turn down" before cutting interest rates,
"because that would be too late."
But there's been no clear case made yet for what would motivate the
start of rate cuts or how they'd be calibrated.
Jefferson noted in most cases when the central bank reduces interest
rates it is doing so to support a weakening economy, which isn't the
case now.
In recent decades the Fed has tackled high inflation, but killed the
economy in the process; it has sustained periods of growth with deft
rate cuts, but in the absence of excessive price pressures; and it
has allowed the unemployment rate to ride along at historically low
levels, but that was also because inflation stayed around or even
below the 2% target.
It has never calibrated rate cuts in the climate policymakers now
face: with an inflation surge seemingly controlled but with
officials nervous about a rebound; a potentially strong period of
purchasing-power recovery underway for workers whose pay is rising
faster than prices; and all to the backdrop of a high-stakes
presidential election.
The situation has left the economics profession all over the map,
with some, including a past Fed vice chair, arguing that a rare
"soft landing" has already been achieved, others saying the Fed is
at risk of letting inflation rekindle with its talk of cuts, and
others that the chance of a recession-inducing policy mistake are
rising by the month.
With no past episode as a guide, Fed officials have started
referring to the art and intuition of policymaking, even as they say
they remain "data dependent."
Waller was, typically, the most blunt in assessing the situation.
"The strength of the economy and the recent data we have received on
inflation mean it is appropriate to be patient, careful, methodical,
deliberative – pick your favorite synonym. Whatever word you pick,
they all translate to one idea: What’s the rush?"
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Andrea
Ricci)
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