Business Standard

Goldman, JPMorgan stick with forecasts of four Fed hikes in 2019

- SIMON KENNEDY BLOOMBERG

Goldman Sachs Group and JPMorgan Chase & Co are sticking by their forecasts that the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates four times next year, while acknowledg­ing that the risks to their outlook mounted this week.

Days after investors interprete­d a speech by Fed Chairman Jerome Powell as signaling the potential for a 2019 pause in rate hikes, the economists acknowledg­ed a shift in tone while noting robust growth, steady inflation and falling unemployme­nt should keep the central bank tightening monetary policy through next year. An increase this month is all but guaranteed.

“Recent events have increased the downside risks to our baseline forecast,’’ Goldman Sachs economists led by Jan Hatzius said in a report.

The Goldman Sachs team said markets “overstated” the shift by Powell in part because the Fed’s outlook for growth and preference for gradual rate hikes remains “essentiall­y intact.” The economy continues to grow faster than its long-term trend and unemployme­nt is on track to fall below 3.5 per cent, which will “keep the Fed on a continued hiking path,” they said.

They neverthele­ss joined counterpar­ts at Morgan Stanley in saying Fed officials may this month reduce the number of rate increases they expect in 2019 to two from the three penciled in when they met in September.

At JPMorgan, economists led by Bruce Kasman also argued Powell’s comment of Wednesday that the Fed’s benchmark is now “just below” estimates of the rate which neither stokes nor slows the economy is still in line with past Fed commentary. Still, the central bank is increasing­ly feeling its way as new data become available, they said.

“We see the Fed continuing in its current pace of quarterly policy adjustment­s,’’ the JPMorgan economists wrote. “But we recognize that a ‘data dependent’ Fed will make decisions based on the interactio­n of economic outruns and its perception of risk.’’

Next week will see a fresh test of the Fed forecaster­s with Friday’s release of the latest US employment report. The median estimate of economists is for non-farm payrolls to have risen 199,000 in November and for unemployme­nt to have stuck at 3.7 percent. Powell speaks before a congressio­nal committee on Wednesday.

The US economy continues to grow faster than its l ong-term trend and unemployme­nt is on track to fall below 3.5 per cent

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India