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Aggressive hikes can provide flexibilit­y

Fed sees gradual future raise as a necessary move

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WASHINGTON: Federal Reserve (Fed) officials agreed at their gathering this month that they need to raise interest rates in half-point steps at their next two meetings, continuing

an aggressive set of moves that would leave them with flexibilit­y to shift gears later if needed.

While highlighti­ng the “strong commitment and determinat­ion” of all policy makers to restore price stability, the minutes of the meeting early this month showed officials attentive to financial conditions as they prepare to raise rates further.

In the weeks since the gathering, financial-market volatility has spiked as investors fret over the risk of a recession, though investors were cheered as they digested the lesshawkis­h-than-feared tone of the report.

The minutes indicate uncertaint­y over potential fault lines in financial markets as well as what level of rates would crimp demand as officials battle the hottest price pressures in 40 years.

References to possibly moving to restrictiv­e policy also signal officials won’t stop until inflation is on a convincing path back to their 2% target. It’s a strategy that signals policy will be more data-dependent after Fed meetings in June and July.

Atlanta Fed president Raphael Bostic suggested on Monday that a September pause “might make sense” if price pressures cooled.

“It is not unreasonab­le to think the Fed is underlinin­g that the path from September

onwards is not set in stone,” Evercore ISI’S Krishna Guha and Peter Williams wrote in a note to clients.

“But we would be careful not to overdo this and read into the Fed language any kind of Bostic September pause-like signal.”

Stocks rose after the minutes were published, while yields on Treasury notes fluctuated and the dollar pared gains. Markets continued to show traders pricing in 100 basis

points of rate hikes over the next two meetings.

Vincent Reinhart, chief economist at Dreyfus and Mellon, said the committee is deploying a strategy of “muscular” gradualism with a series of half-point hikes that will push to whatever frontier is necessary to get prices lower.

“Most participan­ts judged that 50 basispoint increases in the target range would likely be appropriat­e at the next couple of

meetings,” according to the minutes. “Many participan­ts judged that expediting the

removal of policy accommodat­ion would leave the committee well positioned later this year to assess the effects of policy firming and the extent to which economic developmen­ts warranted policy adjustment­s.”

Fed officials “noted that a restrictiv­e stance of policy may well become appropriat­e

depending on the evolving economic outlook and the risks to the outlook,” the minutes said. They said that labour demand continued to outstrip available supply.

Worry about the outlook for corporate profits and rising interest rates has also roiled financial markets.

The S&P 500 stock index is down about 17% year-to-date, while United States Treasury two-year notes yielded 2.5% versus about 0.8% in early January.

At the meeting, officials also finalised plans to allow their US$8.9 trillion (RM39 trillion) balance sheet to begin shrinking, putting additional upward pressure on borrowing costs.

Starting June 1, holdings of Treasuries will be allowed to decline by Us$30bil (Rm132bil)

a month, rising in increments to Us$60bil (Rm264bil) a month in September, while mortgage-backed securities holdings will shrink by Us$17.5bil (Rm77bil) a month, increasing to Us$35bil (Rm154bil).

“Regarding risks related to the balance sheet reduction, several participan­ts noted the potential for unanticipa­ted effects on financial market conditions,” the minutes said.

“I think the Fed has to risk a downturn,” Ethan Harris, head of global economics research at Bank of America Corp, told Bloomberg Television.

“The real question is going to come later, when we get into the fall and when they decide whether to slow down or pause.”

The record also showed that the Fed staff revised up their inflation forecast. They estimated that the personal consumptio­n expenditur­es price index would rise 4.3% in 2022 before decelerati­ng to a 2.5% increase next year.

The Fed’s target for its preferred inflation gauge, the Commerce Department’s personal consumptio­n expenditur­es price index, is 2% a year.

The measure rose 6.6% for the 12 months ending March, while the Labour Department’s consumer price index rose 8.3% in April.

High inflation has angered Americans and hurt President Joe Biden’s approval ratings, with ire also directed at the Fed. Even so, Jerome Powell was confirmed by the Senate to a second term as chairman this month in an 80-19 vote.

So far, the rise in borrowing costs has yet to significan­tly dent consumer demand. Retail sales rose at a solid pace in April, although with the 30-year mortgage rate now above 5%, the pace of home sales has slowed.

— Bloomberg

 ?? — AFP ?? Showing commitment: Powell (right) is congratula­ted by Fed vice-chairman Lael Brainard after he took the oath of office for his second term. The central bank is determined to restore price stability as it prepares to raise rates further next month.
— AFP Showing commitment: Powell (right) is congratula­ted by Fed vice-chairman Lael Brainard after he took the oath of office for his second term. The central bank is determined to restore price stability as it prepares to raise rates further next month.

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