The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Peak rate forecasts still ‘very reasonable’

Fed official: Pace of further hikes depends on incoming data.

- By Jonnelle Marte and Mackenzie Hawkins

Federal Reserve Bank of New York President John Williams said forecasts officials submitted in December are still a good guide for where interest rates are headed this year and that policy may need to stay at restrictiv­e levels for a few years to get inflation down.

Policymake­rs had penciled in a median projection of 5.1% for their benchmark federal funds rate by the end of 2023, implying a couple more rate hikes this year.

“That still seems a very reasonable view of what we’ll need to do this year in order to get supply and demand in balance and bring inflation down,” Williams said on Wednesday during a moderated discussion with the Wall Street Journal in New York.

Fed-funds futures markets were pricing in higher rates following Williams’ remarks.

Fed officials lifted interest rates by a quarter point this month, bringing the target on their benchmark rate to a range of 4.5% to 4.75%. The move was a step down from the Fed’s previous increases, including a halfpoint increase in December and four jumbo-sized 75 basis-point hikes before that.

Williams said further increases of a quarter percentage point “seems like the right size.” But he said the pace of further hikes would depend on incoming data.

“We still have our work cut out for us,” he said.

The Fed may need to raise rates higher to bring them to a sufficient­ly restrictiv­e level if inflation remains elevated or financial conditions loosen, Williams said, noting that rates were “barely into restrictiv­e” territory.

“There is clearly a lot of uncertaint­y around the inflation outlook and there’s definitely scenarios where inflation ends up being more persistent for various reasons,” he said.

“To me, the important thing is we need a sufficient­ly restrictiv­e stance and we need to attain a sufficient­ly restrictiv­e stance of policy,” he added. “We’re going to need to maintain that for a few years to make sure we get inflation to 2%, and then eventually over time we’ll get interest rates presumably back to more normal levels.”

Williams also said wage growth remains “well above” levels that are consistent with the Fed’s 2% goal, and pointed to the persistenc­e of price pressures in the services sector, excluding housing, food and energy.

“That’s the area of the labor market and the economy where I think we still have this demand-supply imbalance,” he said. Fed officials “need to focus on getting that consistent with 2% inflation.”

Speaking separately on Wednesday, Fed Governor Lisa Cook said officials were committed to curbing inflation and further tightening was warranted, though she favored maintainin­g a gradual approach.

“We are not done yet with raising interest rates, and we will need to keep interest rates sufficient­ly restrictiv­e,” she told an event in Washington. Moving in smaller steps “will give us time to evaluate the effects of our fast actions on the economy.”

 ?? ANDREW HARRER/BLOOMBERG ?? John Williams, president of Federal Reserve Bank of New York, says restrictiv­e stance on rates may need to continue for a few years to control inflation.
ANDREW HARRER/BLOOMBERG John Williams, president of Federal Reserve Bank of New York, says restrictiv­e stance on rates may need to continue for a few years to control inflation.

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