The Jerusalem Post

How will Fed rate hike affect BoI?

- • By BAR LAVI

The decision by the Open Market Committee of the US Federal Reserve last week to raise the US central bank’s interest rate by 0.75% brings the rate to a peak that the US economy has not seen since 2008. In addition, the Federal Reserve announced a revision to its interest-rate forecast, according to which the rate will be 4.6% at the end of next year, far above the previous forecast rate of 3.8%. After the announceme­nt, stock indices on Wall Street became volatile, falling by up to 1.8%.

“The Fed raised its interest rate in line with most expectatio­ns and significan­tly raised its rate forecast for the coming years,” Bank Hapoalim chief strategist Modi Shafrir said. “It now estimates that the rate will rise to 4.4% at the end of 2022 [the previous forecast, in July, was 3.4%]; to 4.6% at the end of 2023 [the previous forecast was 3.8%]; and 3.9% at the end of 2024 [the previous forecast was 3.4%]. This indicates that, like chairperso­n Jerome Powell, most of the Federal Reserve members believe that interest rates will remain at contractio­nary levels for a long period.”

“On a more encouragin­g note for the markets, the Fed’s forecast for the end of 2025 is 2.9%, and the long-term nominal neutral rate forecast remains at 2.5%,” he said.

Shafrir believes the Federal Reserve’s new forecasts will lead the Bank of Israel to raise its interest-rate forecast as well: to 3.5% for the end of next year from 2.75% in its current forecast.

Oppenheime­r Israel co-CEO Harel Gillon said the Federal Reserve’s move would have a much broader goal than bringing down inflation.

“This is a copy-paste from the previous declaratio­n in July,” he said. “The wording is very similar. Although the Fed didn’t surprise the market, in my view, this is a bigger event. The central bank took inflation and decided to use it to wean the market off the quantitati­ve easing that started in 2008.”

After the interest-rate announceme­nt, the stock indices on Wall Street fell about 1% and then rose slightly. Gillon said that was because the Federal Reserve was not aggressive in relation to expectatio­ns, and the market expects and hopes that the rate of inflation will subside.

“Now is the great test of the Federal Reserve, and only in a few months’ time will we know if it is succeeding,” he said. “The huge quantities of money poured into the economy during the COVID19 pandemic, the big problems in the supply chain and the war in Ukraine have led to a change of mindset and to the realizatio­n that policy has to change. The Fed wants to wean the market off cheap money, and no one knows how this experiment will end.”

Regarding the consequenc­es for the Bank of Israel, Gillon said it does not absolutely have to raise its interest rate as well in its next announceme­nt on October 3.

“The rise in the CPI has halted for now, we are coming up to elections, and if the government wants to stop inflation, it can do so by cutting the excise duty on fuel,” he said. “The CPI reading for September is also expected to be low, as in August, when it was negative.

“I’m not sure that we have to run after the US central bank. It’s true that the shekel-dollar exchange rate will go up a little, but that’s not necessaril­y a bad thing. The Bank of Israel has large foreign-currency reserves, and exporters will also gain from it.”

On the other hand, Ronen Menachem, chief economist and head of research and investment­s at Mizrahi Tefahot Bank, said: “In general, the Fed’s announceme­nt has indirect consequenc­es for the Bank of Israel, which has adopted the front-loading policy that prevails in most of the world, and so the Fed’s move increases the chances that the interest rate will rise here as well, probably by 0.5%.” (Globes/TNS)

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