The Borneo Post

Financial conditions a source of inflation

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We continue to believe that the FOMC will probably have to end up adding an extra fourth hike to the three hikes penciled in for 2018 in order to promote a soft landing, given easy financial conditions, tax cuts and growth momentum.

THE LAST time Goldman Sachs’s financial conditions index was pointing to a market environmen­t this good, its thenchief economist was using the gauge to analyse the effects of Federal Reserve decisions that he now helps make.

New York Fed President William Dudley developed the index in the 1990s while at Goldman to create an alternativ­e way to measure the impact of monetary policy on the economy. Now, with the index signalling the easiest conditions since 2000 after a big run-up in US stocks, Fed officials are starting to wonder if they will need to address inflated asset prices in order to avoid over-inflated consumer prices.

An account published Jan 3 of the Dec 12 to Dec 13 meeting of the interest-rate setting Federal Open Market Committee, which Dudley vice- chairs, revealed a debate over the risks that easy financial conditions could lead to the kind of economic bounce that would spur unwanted inflation and warrant faster rate increases. A few officials aired the view that it already may be getting started.

Policy makers also published projection­s after the meeting that show their median forecast was for three rate hikes this year. Outgoing Fed Chair Janet Yellen then explained, in her final scheduled FOMC press conference, that part of the reason why that number wasn’t four was due to uncertaint­y over why inflation had decelerate­d in recent months.

Yellen will be replaced by

Krishna Guha, the Washington-based vice chairman of investment research firm Evercore ISI

Fed Governor Jerome Powell when her term expires in early February.

That question over low inflation will probably need to be resolved before officials feel confident enough to step up the pace of tightening to counteract rising stock prices and low long-term interest rates, which are key reasons why financial conditions have eased.

US stocks hit record highs as President Donald Trump signed a US$ 1.5 trillion package of tax cuts into law, shortly after the Fed’s mid-December gathering.

The lack of upward movement in long-term interest rates – even as the Fed raises short-term rates – is also contributi­ng to the improvemen­t in financial conditions indexes.

At the December FOMC meeting, “many participan­ts expected the proposed cuts in personal taxes to provide some boost to consumer spending,” while “a few participan­ts noted that expectatio­ns of tax reform may have already raised consumer spending somewhat to the extent that those expectatio­ns had spurred increases in asset valuations and household net worth,” according to the minutes.

Mainstream economic theory suggests spending encouraged by the “wealth effect” from higher asset prices will reduce unemployme­nt and push up inflation. But inflation slowed in 2017 despite unemployme­nt falling to a 16-year low.

Further complicati­ng matters, the link between financial conditions and employment isn’t always stable. While easier financial conditions have typically coincided with falling unemployme­nt, the end of the last two economic expansions saw increases in asset prices that didn’t put downward pressure on the jobless rate.

Fed officials hope to resolve the inflation question as the impact of one- off declines in the price of certain consumer goods and services, like cell phone plans, fades away.

If inflation bounces back to the central bank’s two per cent target, the current debate shows that financial conditions may weigh more heavily as the Fed considers how quickly to raise rates later this year. — WPBloomber­g

 ??  ?? Outgoing Federal Reserve Chair Yellen arrives to a news conference following a Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting in Washington on Dec 13, 2017. — WP-Bloomberg photo
Outgoing Federal Reserve Chair Yellen arrives to a news conference following a Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting in Washington on Dec 13, 2017. — WP-Bloomberg photo

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