Arab Times

Key issue as Fed meet set: When to slow its rate hikes?

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WASHINGTON, Nov 1, (AP): The Federal Reserve may reach a turning point this week as it announces what’s expected to be another substantia­l three-quarter-point hike in its key interest rate - its fourth straight.

Fed officials will likely engage in a fraught debate over whether it may soon be time to slow its rate hikes, which are intended to cool the worst inflation in four decades but are also raising the risk of a recession.

At a news conference Wednesday after the Fed’s latest meeting, Chair Jerome Powell could signal a forthcomin­g shift to smaller rate increases. Doing so would give officials time to assess the impact of the hikes.

Powell won’t explicitly spell out the Fed’s likely next moves. But economists say he could acknowledg­e that officials are discussing a downshift to a half-point rate increase in December. The Fed’s hikes have already led to much costlier borrowing rates, ranging from mortgages to auto and business loans.

Those higher loan costs have weakened the home market, in particular. The average rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage, which was just 3.14% a year ago, topped 7% last week for the first time since 2002, mortgage buyer Freddie Mac reported. Sales of existing homes have fallen for eight straight months.

Fed officials have stressed that they need to raise rates significan­tly to tame inflation, which has caused hardships for millions of households. High inflation has also become a central point of attack for Republican­s against Democrats in the midterm congressio­nal elections.

Yet some economists have said the Fed should soon consider scaling back the fastest pace of rate increases since the early 1980s.

Calibratin­g

“It is time to think about calibratin­g these rate hikes,” said Diane Swonk, chief economist at KPMG. As the Fed moves closer to finishing its rate increases, she said, “it makes sense to not be hitting the brakes so hard.”

The Fed’s benchmark short-term rate stands in a range of 3% to 3.25%. In September, policymake­rs forecast that they’d raise it by an additional 1.25 percentage points by year’s end. That timetable suggests a three-quarterpoi­nt hike on Wednesday and a half-point increase in December.

One concern for the Fed is that if it suggests it could ease its credit tightening, the financial markets might conclude that it will soon stop raising rates altogether and perhaps cut them next year. Stock and bond prices would move higher, countering the Fed’s efforts to slow the economy.

Fed watchers say there are two ways the central bank could avoid raising any misplaced optimism: Officials could send a tough anti-inflation message Wednesday by reiteratin­g a point from the minutes of their September meeting. The minutes showed that the policymake­rs preferred to err on the side of raising rates too high, rather than raising them too little and risk perpetuati­ng high inflation.

Another possibilit­y is that in December, when policymake­rs will update their economic forecasts, they could pencil in an extra quarter-point rate hike early next year to underscore their determinat­ion to curb inflation, which reached a punishing 8.2% in September.

One reason the Fed might begin pulling back soon is that some early signs suggest that inflation could start declining in 2023. Consumers, squeezed by high prices and costlier loans, are starting to spend less. Supply chain snarls are easing - ocean freight costs have plunged 67% in the past year - which means fewer shortages. Wage growth is plateauing, which, if followed by declines, would reduce inflationa­ry pressures.

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