The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Inflation could lead to Fed’s biggest rate hike since 2000

- By Steve Matthews and Reade Pickert

A hotter-than-expected U.S. inflation reading would push the Federal Reserve closer to considerin­g its single-largest rate hike in more than two decades.

The January consumer price index, due today, is one of the most important data releases before the central bank’s March meeting, which Chair Jerome Powell has signaled will kick off a series of interest-rate hikes.

A reading above the projected 7.2% annual advance in prices — which would be the largest since 1982 — may pressure the Fed to consider its first half-percentage-point increase since 2000, instead of a typical quarter-point move.

Powell indicated last month he wouldn’t rule out a halfpoint hike, and after an unexpected­ly strong January jobs report in which payrolls beat all estimates and wages jumped, traders are all the more convinced that the Fed will be aggressive. Based on Fed funds futures, they now see a 1-in-3 chance of a 50-basis-point hike, up from 1-in-5 before the employment data.

“Because the Fed hasn’t taken it off the table or said it’s extremely unlikely, the market is going to run with it,” said Aneta Markowska, chief financial economist at Jefferies. Given today’s strong labor market, “the Fed’s reaction function relies on one variable, and that is inflation. These numbers are going to matter, big time.”

Even so, it’s a risky move for Powell, who’s awaiting confirmati­on to another fouryear term at the helm. Critics say the Fed has been too slow to act and is now behind the curve in tackling inflation, and a half-point move could be perceived as an admission that they’re right.

And for President Joe Biden — whose party risks losing a razor-thin congressio­nal majority in this year’s midterm elections — it’s all the more important that Powell gets it right. Biden’s approval ratings have fallen in recent months, and many point to his administra­tion’s stimulus package for supercharg­ing prices.

Excluding the volatile food and energy categories, core prices likely rose 5.9% in January from a year earlier, also the fastest in nearly four decades, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg survey of economists. Still, there are a lot of ways the numbers could shake out: Estimates range widely from a monthly advance of 0.2% to 0.8% in the core.

Airfares and lodging away from home are two of the day’s biggest wild cards, as omicron and the related jump in COVID-19 infections curbed travel. Meantime, the two largest components of shelter — rent of primary residence and owners’ equivalent rent — are projected to post another solid advance in January, a theme expected to continue over the coming months.

 ?? DAVID PAUL MORRIS/BLOOMBERG 2021 ?? Soaring prices for groceries and other items have put the Democrats’ razor-thin congressio­nal majority at risk in this year’s midterms.
DAVID PAUL MORRIS/BLOOMBERG 2021 Soaring prices for groceries and other items have put the Democrats’ razor-thin congressio­nal majority at risk in this year’s midterms.

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