Jerome Powell Refuses to Humor Bond Traders’ Tantrums
The Fed indicates inflation will rise above 2% but doesn't flinch on forecasting rates near zero.
Photographer: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg
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The Federal Open Market Committee, as expected, left the fed funds rate unchanged in a range of 0% to 0.25% and didn't fiddle with its asset purchases after its two-day meeting. Fed officials for the first time since December updated their economic projections, which showed expectations for the economic growth of 6.5% this year and core inflation of 2.2% in 2021, 2% in 2022, and 2.1% in 2023. The unemployment rate will probably fall to 4.5% this year, then 3.9% in 2022, and finally 3.5% in 2023, which would match the generational low set in late 2019 and early 2020.
To be clear, if central bankers’ economic forecasts come to pass, the dots are bound to move higher. “The strong bulk of the committee is not showing a rate increase during the forecast period,” Powell said. “Part of that is wanting to see actual data rather than just a forecast at this point. We do expect that we'll begin to make faster progress on both labor markets and inflation as the year goes on because of progress with the vaccines, because of the fiscal support that we're getting. We expect that to happen, but we'll have to see it first.”
Fives Aren't Fighting
Yields retreat as Fed indicates no hurry to raise interest rates
Source: Yahoo finance
What bond traders don't seem to quite understand is that this is exactly what the Fed wants to see. In fact, when Powell debuted the central bank's new average inflation targeting framework in August, he specifically bemoaned how difficult it is to raise the nation's collective expectations for future price growth after years of falling short of 2%. Well, according to Jim Reid at Deutsche Bank, more people in the U.S. are now searching Google News for “inflation” than at any time since records began in 2008. As it so happens, the five-year U.S. breakeven rate also reached a 2008 high on Tuesday.
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