In new forecasts, Fed appears to bow out of the election cycle
Send a link to a friend
[June 13, 2024] (Reuters)
- The U.S. Federal Reserve may have just ducked out of the presidential
campaign spotlight with a fresh set of forecasts showing no interest
rate cuts are likely until after Election Day.
Central bank policymakers on Wednesday kept their benchmark interest
rate unchanged at 5.25%-to-5.50%, where it has been since last July.
They also issued projections showing greater hesitance than before about
starting reductions in high borrowing costs that have made it more
costly for Americans to buy anything on credit from a washing machine to
a car to a house - a dynamic that has contributed to consumers'
persistently poor view of the economy and Democratic President Joe
Biden's management of it.
As recently as March, Fed officials were forecasting interest rates
would fall by three-quarters of a percentage point this year, an outlook
that would have meant cuts beginning this summer and continuing through
the run-up to the Nov. 5 presidential election. That could have opened
the Fed to criticism that it was tilting the scales late in the rematch
between Biden and Republican former President Donald Trump.
Now, though, amid stickier-than-expected inflation and a still-strong
job market, officials have scrapped that forecast for one that foresees
just a single quarter-point cut this year, an outlook that suggests no
action is likely before their final meeting of the year in December.
JAWBONING
Investors for their part have not fully abandoned hope for an earlier
start, which would keep the Fed in the election limelight. Interest rate
futures markets still assign a roughly six-in-10 chance of a rate cut in
September.
A rate reduction then might improve consumer moods to the benefit of
Biden, a prospect Trump had already begun taking aim at earlier this
year.
“I think (Fed Chair Jerome Powell is) going to do something to probably
help the Democrats, I think, if he lowers interest rates,” Trump said
earlier this year in a Fox Business interview. “It looks to me like he’s
trying to lower interest rates for the sake of maybe getting people
elected, I don’t know.”
A delay until after the election could now be a headwind for Biden, whom
polls show receives low marks for his handling of the economy despite
near-record low unemployment, record-high household wealth and
above-trend growth.
"This is obviously bad news for Joe Biden’s campaign, who've been
desperately trying to convince voters that the economy is in good shape
thanks to so-called Bidenomics," Republican consultant Jeanette Hoffman
said.
Asked about the shift, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre
said the administration had no comment "We've always been really clear
about the Fed. They're independent. We do not comment on...the Fed."
The Trump campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
[to top of second column] |
U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell departs after delivering
remarks during a press conference following the announcement that
the Federal Reserve left interest rates unchanged, in Washington,
U.S., June 12, 2024. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File Photo
ELECTIONS AND THE FED
Election year rate cuts are not unheard of but are relatively
unusual.
The most recent occurred in 2020, when, with Trump as president the
Powell Fed cut rates to near zero in response to the sudden onset of
the COVID-19 pandemic. Trump still lost the election to Biden that
November.
The next most recent occurrence was when the Fed under Ben Bernanke
cut rates repeatedly in the fall of 2008 as the financial crisis was
erupting and Democrat Barack Obama and Republican John McCain were
battling for the White House. Obama won.
In 1992, Alan Greenspan's Fed cut rates several times in the months
before Election Day in the face of rising joblessness. Republican
George H. W. Bush bemoaned what he saw as a too-little-too-late
response from the Fed and blamed it in part for his loss to Democrat
Bill Clinton.
"I think that if the interest rates had been lowered more
dramatically that I would have been re-elected president because the
[economic] recovery that we were in would have been more visible,"
Bush said in a 1998 interview with David Frost. "I reappointed him,
and he disappointed me."
HOW A CUT COULD STILL HAPPEN
To be sure, circumstances in the next couple of months could change
sufficiently to warrant a cut by the Fed at its meeting in
mid-September, seven weeks before the election, though not
necessarily in a way that might benefit Biden.
Powell at his press conference on Wednesday laid out two "tests" for
starting rate cuts: The Fed either gets more confidence that
inflation is moving sustainably toward the central bank's 2% goal,
or there is an "unexpected deterioration" in labor market
conditions.
If the first test is the trigger, that could bode well for Biden. If
it is the second, it could be to Trump's benefit.
"If we saw troubling weakening more than expected" in the labor
market, Powell said, that could move rate cuts earlier than now
forecast. "We completely understand the risks, and that's not our
plan..to wait for things to break and then try to fix them."
(Reporting By Dan Burns; Additional reporting by Ann Saphir and
Nathan Layne; Editing by Andrea Ricci)
[© 2024 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |