oann

Fed’s tightening cycle challenged by easing financial conditions, potentially ending the cycle.

(This​ July 28 ⁢story has been refiled to remove the garbling in paragraph 2)

By Michael S. Derby

Advertisement

Financial Conditions May Influence Fed’s Rate Hike Decision

(Reuters) – Less tight⁣ financial conditions⁤ as ​exhibited by the red-hot stock market may increase the ‍chances that the Federal ​Reserve ​hikes rates ‌again before the end ⁢of the year, some economists reckon, even as‍ financial markets put ‌little odds on that happening.

Several measures of⁤ financial conditions, including those produced ​by the⁣ central ⁢bank, have shifted ‍in way that​ signals⁢ reduced ⁢restraint on⁣ the economy, at​ a time when central bank officials believe ⁢more ‍work may be needed to lower​ inflation.

Taking in to account everything from stock prices to measures of borrowing costs for the government, businesses and households, ⁣financial conditions matter⁤ to monetary policy. ⁣That is because the ⁤Fed relies on markets to transmit changes in its⁢ short-term interest rate target to the broader​ economy.

The‌ current⁢ slackening in these gauges‍ means markets and the Fed are ⁢starting to‌ go on separate paths.

“Easy‍ financial conditions obviously boost near-term growth,” and can ⁢encourage more risk-taking of the sort that can lean against the restraint⁣ the Fed​ is trying to ⁢impose on the economy, said Benson Durham,‌ head of global policy at Piper Sandler.

On Friday, the ⁤Federal​ Reserve reported that its Financial Conditions Impulse on Growth for ‍June moved to 0.458, ⁣from May’s 0.603 reading. ‍The index, now​ the lowest since August 2022, seeks to describe whether financial conditions⁢ are aiding or ⁤restraining growth,⁤ so the latest​ reading points ‍to them providing less drag on the economy.

Meanwhile, Goldman Sachs’ closely watched Financial Conditions Index has ​been easing⁣ fairly steadily since May. As of the end of July, that measure was also at levels last⁢ seen in late August of last year, while the⁤ Chicago Fed’s latest index has⁤ also pointed‍ to easier conditions.

Since March of last year, the Fed has been engaged in a historically aggressive ‍campaign⁢ of short-term interest‍ rate increases, taking its target⁢ rate​ from near zero levels ​to​ between ⁤5.25%‍ and 5.5% after ⁤a ⁢quarter percentage-point increase on Wednesday.⁤

An explicit​ goal has been ⁢to tighten financial​ conditions. Mortgage rates⁣ have soared to around 7%,⁤ while other borrowing costs are up. Rate hikes also slammed the stock market, at ⁤least‍ for a time, ‍while pushing up the dollar relative to other currencies.⁣

Tighter‌ financial conditions⁤ have⁤ helped accomplish​ the Fed’s desire to slow down the economy in a bid to lower inflation pressures from multi-decade highs. But now things are shifting the⁢ other way, which‌ could create issues for the Fed as it approaches ⁢the endgame ⁣for its tightening cycle.

Fed ⁢Will ‘Get to Where We Need to⁤ Go’

The various gauges on balance show financial⁤ conditions reached their most restrictive ​levels late last ⁤year,​ and have receded since. That dovetails with⁣ a‍ stock market rally that has pushed up the benchmark S&P 500 Index by nearly 20% so far⁤ this year. ⁣Meanwhile, yields​ on the riskiest corporate debt securities ⁢– so-called junk bonds – have fallen by ​about 1.2 percentage points ‍since last autumn even ​as the Fed kept raising interest rates.

Fed Chair⁢ Jerome Powell, who has regularly faced questions about financial market expectations diverging from officials’ outlooks, brushed ⁣off easier ⁣financial conditions in this week’s press conference‌ that followed the Federal ‌Open ‌Market Committee meeting. He attributed ‌easier financial⁢ conditions to the ⁣stock market rally and a ⁣weaker dollar, and appeared to view the current situation as one that will work itself out over time.

“We will do ‌what it takes to get inflation down ​and⁢ in principle, that could mean that‌ if financial conditions ‌get looser, we have to do more,” Powell⁣ said. “But what tends to happen, though, is ‍financial conditions get in and out of alignment ⁣with what ‍we’re doing, and ultimately ⁢over⁣ time we get where we‌ need to⁢ go.”

Powell ⁣noted in ⁣the press conference⁣ that‍ it is a⁣ tossup as to whether the‌ Fed‍ raises rates or holds ⁢steady in September. He offered no views on whether the central‍ bank will be able to ​boost ⁣by another ‌quarter percentage point by year’s end, as June ‍FOMC forecasts predicted.

Piper Sandler’s Durham said the easier financial conditions make the odds of another rate rise higher by ⁤year’s end, in contrast with the current market outlook. This‍ easing gives officials “the space and the breathing room” to bump rates up ⁢again, especially in an ⁢economy that is otherwise doing very well despite aggressive increases.

Bank of America economists said in‍ a note on Thursday that‌ they believe market pricings show an ⁣underestimation of what the central bank needs to do on rates. They said easing inflation in ⁢the face of ‍still-strong jobs data and better-than-expected ⁢growth “are likely ​to keep the Fed worried ⁣that its policy stance is insufficiently restrictive.”

Still, ⁤the Fed may yet find space not to hike ​rates again. Even as many key⁣ aspects of the ⁤economy have remained strong in the ⁢face of higher rates, inflation pressures are ‍easing.⁤ On⁢ Friday, the ⁣government reported that inflation​ pressures last month and⁣ employment costs in second ‌quarter‍ eased.

(Reporting‍ by Michael S. Derby in New York; Editing by Dan Burns and Matthew Lewis)

Authorities slap charges against Alabama nursing student Carlee Russell for faking her own kidnapping.

Democrat ​and Republican legislators are joining forces, to analyze⁢ Joe⁢ Biden’s Afghanistan withdrawal.

The Hunter ‍Biden Case⁣ Judge lays down‍ the Law, while Joe denies Secret Service protection to RFK ⁢Jr.

As the 2024 elections heat up, multiple outlets are making their predictions, ⁤over who ⁢will win the presidency.

By David Shepardson (Reuters) -The backup safety ‍driver behind the wheel of a ⁣self-driving Uber Technologies test ⁤vehicle that struck and ⁢killed…

(Reuters) -Elon ⁣Musk said on Friday⁤ monthly users of social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter, reached a “new high” and… ​

(Reuters) ‍– U.S. President Joe Biden is planning to sign​ an executive order to⁢ limit critical U.S. ⁢technology investments in China by…

By Joyce Lee⁤ SEOUL (Reuters) -From​ Intel⁣ to Samsung,‍ global ⁢chipmakers are celebrating ​the beginning of the end of‌ a semiconductor supply…‌



" Conservative News Daily does not always share or support the views and opinions expressed here; they are just those of the writer."
*As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases
Back to top button
Available for Amazon Prime
Close

Adblock Detected

Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker