Pit stop or peak is the big question for Fed this year

Bloomberg

Deciphering the intentions of Federal Reserve officials rarely gets this easy. As one after another preaches patience before their next interest-rate move, a tougher question is emerging about their plans to pause: Is this a pit stop or the peak?
After nine rate increases since December 2015, Fed officials have shifted from signalling “gradual” tightening to a stance that is “patient,” a word Chairman Jerome Powell used in comments January 10 that has been repeated by several of his colleagues since. The chorus even extended to Kansas City Fed President Esther George, usually one of the most hawkish members and one who votes on monetary policy this year.
Anticipating a Fed on hold, financial markets are pricing in a high probability of no change at all in the policy rate for 2019. US central bankers in December wrote down a median estimate of two more. Bridging this gap with investors is going to be tricky and potentially volatile if the Fed decides it needs to start raising rates again.
“The Fed’s hope is that the data will be pretty clear,’’ said Michael Gapen, chief US economist at Barclays Plc. “They will have to re-engage markets and tell them we are going to tighten a little further.”
Gapen and other economists, such as Omair Sharif at Societe Generale, are pushing their forecast for hikes into the back half of 2019 for a variety of reasons.
The government shutdown is going to make first-quarter data murky. Inflation is slightly below the Fed’s 2 percent target. Minutes from the December meeting show the policy committee pondering as many as five downside risks — from escalating trade tensions, to slowing global growth and tighter financial conditions in the US. “Now is the perfect time to sit back,” Sharif said in an interview.
For the Fed, a patient posture means the economy will dictate if and when the central bank moves. Here are the arguments from both sides:

A PIT STOP
Nothing suggests that the strong US labor market has veered off its pace of job gains. The US economy added 2.6 million jobs last year and December finished with a gain of 312,000. That underpins household confidence and consumption, the most important engine for US growth.
Compensation measures are moving up gradually as companies offer more benefits and pay to retain and attract workers. If labor market strength continues at the same pace, some economists predict it will eventually show up in firmer prices that the Fed will have to lean against with more gradual rate hikes.
“The labour market is still tightening,’’ said Michael Feroli, chief US economist for JPMorgan Chase & Co. “We think underlying wage pressures have been accelerating.’’ Another part of the growth story for 2019 is fiscal stimulus. The spending boost from personal and corporate tax cuts is fading a bit, says Ryan Sweet, head of monetary policy research at Moody’s Analytics Inc. But the firm estimates that higher government spending could add as much as four tenths of a percent to gross domestic product this year. “I would be surprised if this is the peak of the tightening cycle,’’ Sweet said.

THE PEAK
One of the strongest cases for standing pat is the asymmetry of its policy risks, says Laurence Meyer, a former Fed governor and head of Monetary Policy Analytics Inc in Washington. The Fed has consistently undershot its inflation target for most of the expansion. If actual growth, and Fed officials’ forecasts for next year, start to decelerate by June, Meyer said, the Federal Open Market Committee would be cautious about tightening further.
“We are in a dangerous place,’’ Meyer said. “You have some fragility now where a shock could make us fall into a recession with the policy constraint of the zero boundary’’ still too close.

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