Federal Reserve Chairman Powell arrived on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, on July 9, 2024, to testify at the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Hearing to review the semi-annual monetary policy report submitted to Congress.
Chris Klebonis | AFP | Getty Images
Federal Reserve officials moved closer to their low-inflation goal when they met on Tuesday, but the extent to which they will ease interest rates remains an open question.
Inflation data for the week showed price pressures have eased sharply since a meteoric rise in 2021-22. a ruler consumer price showed 12-month inflation at its lowest level since February 2021, while wholesale price measures Said that pipeline price increases are basically under control.
These two data are undoubtedly enough to clear the way for the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates. Federal Open Market Committee meetingWednesday ended with an interest rate decision and the central bank governor’s latest forecast on the way forward.
Claudia Sahm, chief economist at New Century Advisors, told CNBC on Friday that “we’ve had another two months of good inflation data” since the last Fed meeting. “That’s what the Fed is asking for.”
However, the question now turns to how aggressively the Fed should act. Financial markets, while providing guidance on where the central bank should go, are providing no help.
For much of the past week, futures markets had priced in a steep quarter-percentage point cut, or 25 basis points. However, the situation reversed on Friday and traders had almost a chance to move down 25 basis points or half a basis point, or 50 basis points, according to CME Group data. Fed Watch tool.
Sam is among those who think the Fed should step up its game.
She said the inflation data “should by itself take us to 25 next week, which is what it should be, and we’ll get a series of cuts after that”. “The federal funds rate has been above 5% and has been in place to fight inflation for over a year. The battle has been won. They need to start getting out of the way.”
Sam said that would mean first cutting interest rates by 50 basis points to lay the groundwork for a potential labor market recession.
“The labor market has softened since last July,” she said. “So there’s an aspect that needs to be recalibrated. We’re getting more information. (Fed officials) need to clean up, cut rates by 50 basis points and then prepare to do more.”
confidence in inflation
The inflation report suggests that the fight to get inflation back down to 2% is not quite over yet, but things are at least moving in the right direction.
All items consumer price index The inflation rate edged up only 0.2% in August, and the full-year inflation rate was 2.5%. Excluding food and energy, the core inflation rate is 3.2%, still far short of the Fed’s target.
However, much of the core advantage comes from high housing costs, driven by the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ convoluted “owner rent equivalent” measure, which asks homeowners what they could earn if they rented out their homes What. This indicator accounts for approximately 27% of the total weight of CPI, an increase of 5.4% compared with the same period last year.
Despite lingering pressure, consumer surveys show confidence that inflation has been contained, if not completely contained. A September University of Michigan survey showed that respondents expected inflation to be 2.7% in the next 12 months, the lowest level since December 2020.
Fed Chairman considers all inflation dynamics Jerome Powell At the end of August, he said that he was “increased” in the inflation rate returning to 2%.
That leaves only employment. Powell said in the same speech Fed holds annual retreat in Jackson Hole, Wyomingthe Fed “does not seek or welcome further cooling of labor market conditions.”
The Fed has two mandates—price stability and a healthy job market—and its primary mission appears to be about to change.
“If Powell wants to make good on his promise, ‘We want the economy to not weaken further, not cool further,’ they’re going to have to actually move here because the cooling trend is already established,” Sam said. “Before the disruption, we “We will continue to see employment declines and unemployment rates rise.”
A quarterly case
To be fair, market expectations for a 25 basis point rate cut by the Federal Reserve at next week’s meeting are quite large, reflecting that the central bank still has more work to do on inflation and that it is not overly worried about the labor market or the job market. Broader economy cooling.
“That’s really the key thing they need to hone in on is that they’re normalizing policy rather than trying to provide support for a really struggling economy,” said Tom Simons, U.S. economist at Jefferies. Loose environment. “I think they’ve done a really good job of making that point so far. “
Even if Simons predicts that the Fed will take a quarter-percentage point move, there is still plenty of room for the Fed to take more action later.
Indeed, markets are pricing in a possible 1.25 percentage point drop in interest rates by the end of 2024, suggesting some urgency in lowering benchmark borrowing costs to 5.50% from their highest level in 23 years (currently 5.25%).
“The whole reason they’re so cautious about cutting interest rates is they’re worried that inflation is going to come back,” Simons said. “Now, they’re more confident based on the data that says (inflation) is not going to come back right now. But they do need to be very careful. to monitor potential changes.”