Vancouver Sun

Still a `ways to go,' Fed's Powell says after half-point hike

U.S. central bank sees federal funds rate climbing to 5.1% by the end of next year

- STEVE MATTHEWS

Chairman Jerome Powell said the Federal Reserve is not close to ending its anti-inflation campaign of interest-rate increases as officials signalled borrowing costs will head higher than investors expect next year.

“We still have some ways to go,” he told a press conference on Wednesday in Washington after the Federal Open Market Committee raised its benchmark rate by 50 basis points to a 4.25 per cent to 4.5 per cent target range. Policymake­rs projected rates would end next year at 5.1 per cent, according to their median forecast, before being cut to 4.1 per cent in 2024 — a higher level than previously indicated.

Powell said that the size of the rate increase delivered on Feb. 1 at the Fed's next meeting would depend on incoming data — leaving the door open to another half-percentage point move or a step down to a quarter point — and he pushed back against bets that the Fed would reverse course next year.

“I wouldn't see us considerin­g rate cuts until the committee is confident that inflation is moving down to 2 per cent in a sustained way,” he said. “Restoring price stability will likely require maintainin­g a restrictiv­e policy stance for some time,” he said.

“The committee anticipate­s that ongoing increases in the target range will be appropriat­e in order to attain a stance of monetary policy that is sufficient­ly restrictiv­e to return inflation to 2 per cent over time,” the FOMC said in its statement, repeating language it has used in previous communicat­ions.

Investors had been speculatin­g that the Fed would soon pause its hikes after financial conditions eased. Until Wednesday, stocks had risen, while mortgage rates and the dollar had fallen since Powell last month suggested a policy shift was coming. They'd also bet rates would reach about 4.8 per cent in May, followed by cuts totalling 50 basis points in the second half of the year. The vote was unanimous. “It is our judgment today that we are not at a sufficient­ly restrictiv­e policy stance yet,” the Fed chief said. “We will stay the course until the job is done.”

Powell had previously signalled plans to moderate hikes, while emphasizin­g that the pace of tightening is less significan­t than the peak and the duration of rates at a high level.

The decision follows four consecutiv­e 75 basis-point hikes that have boosted rates at the fastest pace since Paul Volcker led the central bank in the 1980s.

Consumer-price increases have begun a more pronounced slowdown from their 40-year high earlier this year. But a growing cadre of economists expect the Fed's aggressive action to tip the U.S. into recession next year.

Such concerns have drawn lawmaker criticism, with Democratic senators Elizabeth Warren, Bernie Sanders and Sheldon Whitehouse warning that rate hikes risk “slowing the economy to a crawl.”

Officials gave a clearer sign that they expect higher rates to impact the economy. They cut their 2023 growth forecasts, seeing expansion of 0.5 per cent, according to median projection­s released Wednesday. They raised their estimate for 2022 GDP slightly to 0.5 per cent. The central bankers increased their projection for the unemployme­nt rate next year to 4.6 per cent from its 3.7 per cent level in November.

The distributi­on of rate forecasts also skewed higher, with

seven of 19 officials seeing rates above 5.25 per cent next year.

Fed officials raised their estimates for the main and core readings of their preferred inflation gauge, the index for personal consumptio­n expenditur­es. They now see PCE at 3.1 per cent in 2023 compared with a September estimate of 2.8 per cent, while core — which excludes food and energy — may be 3.5 per cent for next year.

Wednesday's move caps a challengin­g year for the U.S. central bank which was initially slow to begin tightening policy in response to surging price pressures.

Since lifting rates from near zero in March, the Fed has moved aggressive­ly to catch up, while preserving hope it can deliver a soft landing that avoids a dramatic surge in unemployme­nt.

Officials are seeking to slow growth to below its long-term trend to cool the labour market — with job openings still far above the number of unemployed Americans

— and reduce pressure on prices that are running well above their 2 per cent target.

Policymake­rs got some good news Tuesday when government data showed consumer prices rose 7.1 per cent in the year ending November, the lowest rate this year.

Even so, Powell has repeatedly said he's willing for the economy to suffer some pain to lower inflation and avoid the mistakes of the 1970s when the Fed prematurel­y loosened monetary policy.

U.S. stocks came off session lows after the announceme­nt. The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq 100 briefly oscillated in a volatile session that saw equities wipe out gains after the central bank raised rates and signalled more increases are to come.

The hawkish decision and subsequent comments from the Fed chairman likewise whipsawed Treasuries, with rates spiking higher before coming back to pre-decision levels.

 ?? EVELYN HOCKSTEIN/ REUTERS ?? “I wouldn't see us considerin­g rate cuts until the committee is confident that inflation is moving down to 2 per cent in a sustained way,” says U.S. Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell.
EVELYN HOCKSTEIN/ REUTERS “I wouldn't see us considerin­g rate cuts until the committee is confident that inflation is moving down to 2 per cent in a sustained way,” says U.S. Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell.

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