Fed faces wave of data before deciding on end-of-summer rate cut
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[July 19, 2024] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Investors have locked onto the U.S. central
bank's Sept. 17-18 meeting for the start of interest rate cuts that
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has said will represent a
"consequential" change in policy from the pandemic-era battle against
inflation to a phase of easing monetary policy.
Where the process ends up is uncertain. Shifts in supply and investment
patterns during the COVID-19 era, new geopolitical tensions, even the
risk of tariff wars instigated by a potential second Trump
administration could make the Fed's exit from high interest rates as
challenging as its fight against inflation.
But the initial turn, at least, appears close.
Whether September marks the starting point will depend on data behaving
close to what Fed officials expect, with continued progress on lowering
inflation towards the central bank's 2% target and a labor market
staying in rough balance with modest wage and monthly job gains.
The Fed is expected to hold its benchmark interest rate steady in the
5.25%-5.50% range at its July 30-31 meeting, but its new policy
statement may also change the descriptions of the economy and outlook to
lay the groundwork for a rate cut in September.
The seven-week gap between the July and September meetings is a week
longer than usual, allowing for more data to accumulate. It also
includes the Kansas City Fed's annual research conference in Jackson
Hole, Wyoming, a venue often used by Fed chiefs to deliver
policy-relevant messages.
"We're actually going to learn a lot between July and September," New
York Fed President John Williams said in a recent Wall Street Journal
interview.

HOW THEY GOT HERE
After downplaying the pandemic-triggered inflation shock as
"transitory," the Fed beginning in March 2022 launched what became a
historically rapid rise in interest rates after policymakers accepted
that price pressures were going to persist and became worried about
losing public confidence.
Over the course of 12 policy meetings the Fed raised its benchmark rate
by 5.25 percentage points, averaging nearly half a percentage point per
meeting. That included four consecutive hikes of three-quarters of a
percentage point that were meant to both send a message of resolve about
taming inflation and catch up after what many monetary policy rules
suggested was a late and slow start to the tightening cycle.
The Fed's policy rate last July reached roughly the same level as during
the run-up to the 2007-2009 financial crisis, and the central bank has
held it there since. The length of this period of "restrictive" interest
rates will likely rank in the middle of other recent Fed monetary policy
cycles.
But that's because of the positive inflation surprises officials got
last year when supply chains and labor markets began behaving more like
they did before the pandemic. Much of the inflation shock did prove
"transitory," just at a slower pace than policymakers' initially
anticipated.
WILL DISINFLATION CONTINUE?
In their final comments before the upcoming policy meeting, Fed
officials said they thought inflation is likely to continue slowing, and
rate cuts would be appropriate if it does.
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U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell delivers remarks during a
press conference in Washington, U.S., June 12, 2024. REUTERS/Evelyn
Hockstein/File Photo

Inflation, based on the Fed's preferred personal consumption
expenditures price index, was 2.6% in May, and many economists
expect it to dip to 2.5% or lower when the data for June is released
on July 26.
Then, ahead of the September meeting, policymakers will receive a
PCE release for July on Aug. 30, plus two consumer price index
reports on Aug. 14 and Sept. 11, respectively, covering the July and
August data. They'll also see wholesale prices data for both months.
Despite worries earlier this year that inflation was rebounding,
recent data has shown a renewed slowing.
CAN THE JOB MARKET STAY AFLOAT?
Powell recently referred to the job market as being in
"equilibrium," a phrase that in its fullest sense means the number
of available workers is roughly balanced with firms' demand for
labor; the monthly flow of new hires and people quitting is in line
with population growth; and wage growth is coming into line with the
Fed's inflation target.
The current 4.1% unemployment rate is about what central bank
officials feel is sustainable in the long run with inflation at 2%,
and policymakers are hopeful they will finish the inflation fight
and start lowering rates without a substantial rise in joblessness.
Coming employment reports will be looked at to confirm that rising
wages and labor shortages no longer pose an inflation risk, while
signs of weakening could - if bad enough - influence the size and
pace of future rate cuts. The unemployment rate has been rising
slowly but steadily from last year's historic low of 3.4%, and some
Fed officials have noted that often when the unemployment rate
starts to rise, it eventually does so fast.
Before they gather in September, officials will receive the Labor
Department's employment reports for July and August on Aug. 2 and
Sept. 6, respectively. Data on jobless claims arrives weekly, and
the figures have been rising, though the series is volatile and
heavily influenced by seasonal factors.
Reports on job openings and worker quit levels for June and July
will be released on July 30 and Sept. 4, respectively.
The Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey data has played a
surprisingly large role in recent Fed deliberations, an example of
how the pandemic distorted the job market. With the ratio of job
openings to unemployed and other aspects of the report returning to
pre-pandemic levels, the JOLTS reports have shaped officials' view
that the unemployment rate could start to rise if the Fed presses on
the economy too hard for too long.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Dan Burns and Paul Simao)
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