Vancouver Sun

Trump slams Fed on eve of rate meeting amid ‘very strong’ dollar

- CRAIG TORRES AND CHRISTOPHE­R CONDON

WASHINGTON President Donald Trump slammed the Federal Reserve on the eve of a pivotal policy meeting for “even considerin­g” another interest-rate increase, laying out arguments against a hike to savour the achievemen­t of a strong U.S. economy.

“It is incredible that with a very strong dollar and virtually no inflation, the outside world blowing up around us, Paris is burning and China way down, the Fed is even considerin­g yet another interest rate hike,” Trump said in a tweet on Monday. “Take the Victory!”

The Federal Open Market Committee begins a two-day meeting in Washington on Tuesday and trading in interest rate futures indicate a greater than 70 per cent chance of the panel’s fourth hike this year. Analysts said that his latest attack make it extremely hard for Chairman Jerome Powell, who was Trump’s hand-picked choice to be head the Federal Reserve, to pause this week, even if he wanted to.

“Trump makes very good points, to be honest. But if they skip a hike are they caving to Trump?” said Neil Dutta, an economist at Renaissanc­e Macro Research in New York. “If they hike and change nothing else, the stock market will tank as growth expectatio­ns decline and Trump vindicated. If they skip, and say they are responding to data, stocks probably catch a bid.”

Trump’s tweets about monetary policy have intensifie­d as U.S. stocks tumble amid signs the world’s largest economy may be moderating. U.S. equity indexes slid to their lowest close in 14 months as investors weighed the impact of the Fed on growth in an economy already anxious over trade, geopolitic­al tensions and a possible government shutdown. At one point, the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped more than 600 points.

For months, Trump has accused the central bank of underminin­g the economy’s growth by hiking interest rates. U.S. presidents have typically refrained from encroachin­g on the independen­ce of the Fed.

“The criticism by the administra­tion of the Fed is not going to stop, and it’s likely to intensify,’’ said Joshua Feinman, global chief economist at DWS in New York and a former Fed staff economist. “The president stakes so much of his claim to achievemen­t on the stock market and economic performanc­e. He’s worried about whether that will falter, so he’s setting up the Fed to take the blame.’’

After the Fed’s Dec. 18-19 meeting, expectatio­ns of further hikes shrink, with investors betting on only one move next year. The consensus among economists is for two 2019 hikes. That is partly due to Fed officials signalling in recent speeches that their tightening campaign has succeeded in raising borrowing costs near to territory that they consider neutral in terms of speeding up or slowing the economy.

Fed officials will update quarterly forecasts for the economy and the project path of interest rates at this week’s meeting. In September they pencilled in three moves in 2019.

Fed officials have also noted they are paying attention to risks such as slowing growth in Europe and in interest-sensitive sectors of the U.S. economy. Financial conditions have also tightened, partly because of stock-market losses on the White House’s harsh trade rhetoric and fears that uncertaint­y over Trump’s policies could hit business investment.

Data released in recent weeks show economic growth is moderating in the fourth quarter — following the strongest back-toback periods since 2015 — while remaining faster than the average pace during an expansion poised to become the longest in U.S. history.

While job and wage gains missed forecasts for November, they were still consistent with solid growth, and strong retail sales suggested Americans are opening their wallets for the holiday season. At the same time, many measures of consumer and business sentiment have declined in recent weeks, particular­ly gauges of the economic outlook, and factory production was weaker than expected last month.

“We gave the Fed a job. We delegated to them responsibi­lity for two things: managing the longrun inflation and keeping output close to potential. And also being the actor of last resort when we got a financial crisis,” Paul Romer, the former World Bank chief economist who won the 2018 Nobel Prize in economics, told Bloomberg Television on Monday.

“And once you give them a job, the thing to do is to let them do their job,” he said. “They’ve got the best data, they are the ones looking past the next election cycle too. And we want someone to being doing that.”

 ??  ?? Donald Trump
Donald Trump

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada