Fed’s Brainard Says Case for September Rate Pause Is ‘Very Hard’

(Bloomberg) - Federal Reserve Vice Chair Lael Brainard said expectations for half-percentage-point increases in interest rates this month and next were reasonable, and saw no case for pausing the central bank’s tightening campaign afterward.

 

“From where I sit today, market pricing for 50 basis points, potentially in June and July, from the data we have in hand today, seems like a reasonable path,” Brainard said Thursday in an interview with CNBC. “Right now it’s very hard to see the case for a pause. We’ve still got a lot of work to do to get inflation down to our 2% target.”

Her remarks were the latest from officials to reinforce the message that they’re staying the course on hiking rates, with Cleveland Fed chief Loretta Mester later saying that the pace of increases could potentially speed up or slow down in September, depending on what happens with inflation.

US central bankers raised rates by half a percentage point last month and signaled they’ll do so again at the next two meetings as they try to suppress demand and tamp down the hottest inflation in decades.

Since then, Atlanta Fed chief Raphael Bostic has suggested a pause in September might make “sense.” But Brainard’s comment made clear that his was a minority opinion.

“My sense is that there’s virtually no support for that, outside of Bostic,” said Stephen Stanley, chief economist at Amherst Pierpont Securities. “It seems like there’s an unusual degree of consensus on the committee right now -- which is not surprising because the course of action, at least in the short run, is pretty obvious.”

Minutes from the Fed’s May meeting suggested that the rapid pace of policy tightening would position officials to potentially slow the hiking cycle later this year if needed. Brainard, who was sworn in as vice chair last week, echoed this desire for flexibility, calling it “harder to say” what the Fed should do once it got to September.

“If we don’t see the kind of deceleration in monthly inflation prints, if we don’t see some of that really hot demand starting to cool a little bit, then it might well be appropriate to have another meeting where we proceed at the same pace,” she said. “If we are seeing a deceleration in the monthly prints, it might make sense to be proceeding at a slightly slower pace.”

The Ukraine war and rolling Covid-19 lockdowns in China have further tangled global supply chains, complicating the Fed’s task of wrestling inflation back to its 2% target.

The central bank’s preferred gauge of price pressures rose 6.3% during the 12 months ending April, which was slightly slower than the previous month. Brainard said it was too soon to say that it had peaked.

“I am going to be looking to see a consistent string of decelerating monthly prints on core inflation before I’m going to feel more confident,” she said. “We’re certainly going to do what is necessary to bring inflation back down. That is our number one challenge.”

The Fed is also tightening financial conditions by shrinking its enlarged balance sheet at a monthly pace that ramps up to $95 billion in September. The balance sheet more than doubled in size to $8.9 trillion as the central bank aggressively bought assets to support the US economy during the first two years of the pandemic.

Brainard said that it was hard to say how much impact the shrinking balance sheet would have on financial conditions, but noted some estimates suggest it might be worth another two-to-three rate hikes.

Financial markets have swung sharply as investors fret the Fed’s efforts to curb inflation could trigger a recession, and there are some early signs that its campaign to cool the economy is having an impact. The Fed’s Beige Book survey released Wednesday suggested the pace of growth was downshifting, with four of the central bank’s 12 districts noting that growth had slowed.

Existing home sales have slowed as mortgage rates have increased but other parts of the economy have maintained momentum. Recent data for retail sales and factory production show the economy remained strong as it began the second quarter. Employment is also still robust, with payrolls rising by 428,000 in April, and another roughly 323,000 forecast for May when the Labor Department releases the report Friday.

Mester, speaking virtually to the Philadelphia Council for Business Economics, later said that she favored getting rates to the neutral level that neither speeds up for slows down the economy as fast as “practicably possible,” while preserving policy flexibility to do more if needed.

“I don’t think we can say today should we pause or not until we know what the economic conditions look like at that point,” she said. “We can’t say today how high interest rates are going to have to go. We have to monitor conditions and really assess how fast demand and supply are coming back into balance.”

(Updates with Mester comment in final paragraph.)

By Craig Torres and Catarina Saraiva

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