Albuquerque Journal

Fed lines up another big interest-rate hike

Central Bank mulls eventual downshift

- BY JONNELLE MARTE

Federal Reserve officials are preparing to roll out another supersized interest-rate increase in early November, when they will also likely debate tactics for completing the most aggressive tightening cycle in four decades.

Officials have been rapidly raising rates after being slow to tackle inflation that proved more persistent than expected. But with rates now approachin­g levels that could weigh on economic growth, policymake­rs are beginning to lay the groundwork for shifting to smaller moves that get them to the finish line without going too far, while leaving the door open to going further if inflation doesn’t abate.

“Front loading was a good thing,” Chicago Fed President Charles Evans told a community banking symposium hosted jointly by his bank Friday, reminding his audience that rates were down near zero in March. “But overshooti­ng is costly too, and there is great uncertaint­y about how restrictiv­e policy must actually become. So this is going to put a premium on the strategy of getting to a place and a level where policy can plan to rest and evaluate.”

Officials, who now enter their blackout period ahead of the Nov. 1-2 policy meeting, want to raise rates to a level that restricts growth and hold them there for some time while inflation comes down. After they hiked rates by 75 basis points at each of the last three Fed meetings, the central bank’s benchmark rate is now at a target range of 3% to 3.25%.

Policymake­rs see rates rising to a median of 4.6% next year, according to projection­s released last month. Investors bet that the Fed will hike by 75 basis points at their Nov. 1-2 meeting, move by either 50 or 75 basis points in December, and end the tightening cycle at a peak around 4.9% in early 2023.

U.S. central bankers worry inflation will continue to spiral higher if they stop their rate hiking campaign too early. But if they raise rates too much, they risk pushing the economy into a painful recession.

San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly said Friday the central bank should start planning for a reduction in the size of rate increases, though it’s not yet time to “step down” from large hikes.

“It should at least be something we’re considerin­g at this point, but the data haven’t been cooperatin­g,” Daly said during a moderated discussion hosted by the University of California Berkeley. If officials raise rates by 75 basis points at the November meeting, “I would really recommend people don’t take that away as, it’s 75 forever,” she said.

Downshifti­ng to more incrementa­l rate increases, such as a 50 basis-point increase in December, could give them room to keep hiking rates next year if inflation doesn’t start to decelerate as expected, said Derek Tang, an economist at LH Meyer in Washington. That reduces the risk that they bring rates higher than they would like, a helpful strategy since officials’ own forecasts show they are hesitant to cut rates next year.

But policymake­rs could face a communicat­ions challenge if investors misinterpr­et the downshift, stock markets rally and financial conditions ease, as they did after the Fed’s meeting in July, said Kathy Bostjancic.

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