Muscat Daily

US Fed signals inflation fight not over

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America's Federal Reserve slowed its pace of interest rate hikes, tempering an aggressive campaign to rein in costs as inflation cools, but signaled the battle is not yet over.

The US central bank announced a quarter-point hike to the benchmark lending rate at the end of its two-day policy meeting, taking the rate to a target range of 4.50-4.75 per cent.

"Inflation has eased somewhat but remains elevated," said the Fed's policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) in a statement.

While recent developmen­ts are encouragin­g, officials will need "substantia­lly more evidence" to be confident that inflation is on a sustained downward path, Fed Chair Jerome Powell told a press briefing.

According to the FOMC statement, "the committee anticipate­s that ongoing increases in the target range will be appropriat­e" to bring inflation back to policymake­rs' two percent target.

The Fed has cranked up interest rates eight times since March 2022, including four consecutiv­e 0.75 percentage point increases, lifting borrowing costs in hopes of dampening demand.

The aim is to rein in inflation, which surged to its fastest pace in decades last year but has since

come off a peak.

On Wednesday, the Fed acknowledg­ed recent indicators "point to modest growth in spending and production" as economic activity eases.

The 0.25 percentage point rise marks a step down from December's half-point hike and the series of bigger spikes last year.

But the FOMC statement suggests rate increases will continue.

Powell noted that it will take a few more rate hikes to get to an "appropriat­ely restrictiv­e" policy level while inflation runs hot.

And under current expectatio­ns, it "will not be appropriat­e to cut rates this year," he said.

The Fed also stressed that officials are "highly attentive to in

flation risks" amid fallout from Russia's war against Ukraine, which is contributi­ng to greater global uncertaint­y.

Pushing back

"The Fed is pushing back against market expectatio­ns that rate cuts are coming," said Ryan Sweet, chief US economist at Oxford Economics.

"The central bank is clearly signaling that it will err on the side of doing too much than too little to tame inflation," Sweet said. He expects a policy-induced recession to start in the second quarter this year.

But Powell told reporters that growth will continue, though at a "fairly subdued level this year."

With a strong labor market, fading inflation, as well as public and private spending in the pipeline to support economic activity, there is a good chance of positive growth in 2023, Powell said.

For now, data released Tuesday showed that a measure of pay and benefits rose less than expected in the fourth quarter last year.

On Wednesday, payroll firm ADP'S figures indicated private hiring slowed more than anticipate­d in January, adding to signs that the economy is cooling.

Ian Shepherdso­n, chief economist of Pantheon Macroecono­mics, believes an end to rate hikes is in sight.

He expects that if the Fed hikes rates again in March, it "won't be going again in May."

But he raised concerns that policymake­rs may be "so wedded to the idea of raising rates again that they will require disproport­ionately strong evidence to persuade them to stop."

Officials have expressed determinat­ion to stay the course, with Powell telling reporters Wednesday that the Fed remains "strongly committed" to bringing inflation down.

For now, markets liked the Fed's shift in tone as it noted the progress made in lowering costs, Shepherdso­n said.

 ?? (AFP) ?? US Fed chief Jerome Powell leaves after speaking at a news conference on Wednesday in Washington, DC
(AFP) US Fed chief Jerome Powell leaves after speaking at a news conference on Wednesday in Washington, DC

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