Not a good news as there won't be any US interest rate cuts at least till May
Business
Fed keeps policy rate in 5.25pc-5.50pc range; Fed's Powell says March rate cut unlikely
WASHINGTON/LAHORE (Web Desk/Reuters) – As the central bank on Wednesday maintained the US interest rates at 5.25-5.50 per cent, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell also all but ruled out a cut at the next meeting scheduled in March, meaning that there won’t be any reduction in borrowing costs at least till May.
The news is certainly a bad omen for Pakistan, where the central earlier this week kept the key policy rate at 22pc, when the markets and businessmen have been clamouring for the rate cuts as the economy stays crippled thanks to the record-high borrowing costs.
The State Bank of Pakistan’s Monetary Policy Committee too will now meet again in March. But with the inflation in the country rising again, especially the latest decision to hike the fuel prices and the expected increase in energy tariffs, any hopes for rate cuts are virtually dead.
Moreover, the US Fed is a “benchmark” for most of the central banks across the globe, meaning that we too won’t have any Pakistan rate cuts till May.
Powell, however, in a sweeping endorsement of the US economy's strength, said interest rates had peaked and would move lower in coming months, with inflation continuing to fall and an expectation of sustained job and economic growth.
Powell, speaking after the end of a two-day policy meeting, said, “Inflation is still too high. Ongoing progress in bringing it down is not assured," as the Fed's policy-setting committee announced that rate cuts would not be appropriate until there is "greater confidence that inflation is moving" towards the central bank's 2pc target.
But in almost every other way during a 48-minute session with reporters Powell offered an unhedged round of good news about the status of an aggressive war on inflation that many economists felt would tilt the US into recession and throw millions out of work with the highest and fastest rate hikes in roughly 4 decades.
"The executive summary would be growth is solid to strong ... 3.7pc unemployment indicates the labour market is strong ... We've got six good months of inflation data and an expectation that there's more to come," the Fed chief said. "Let's be honest, this is a good economy."
Powell said US rate cuts would come once the Fed becomes more secure that inflation will continue to decline from a level it still characterises as "elevated," at least on a one-year basis, with the personal consumption expenditures price index, a key measure used by policymakers, at 2.6pc on an annual basis as of December.
But he also suggested it was just a matter of time before that conviction kicks in.
Inflation is already below 2pc when measured on a seven-month basis and the Fed has pledged US rate cuts would begin before the one-year rate reaches the target level.
After Powell all but ruled out a cut at the March meeting, investors in contracts tied to the Fed's policy rate keyed in on May 1 as the day the central bank will begin lowering that rate from the level it has held since last July.
While Powell's comments lay out a rosy economic scenario in a presidential election year that could lean heavily on public attitudes about inflation and wages, they were nonetheless a short-term blow to investors who had been expecting rate cuts to start as early as seven weeks from now.
"It is clear that the Fed are in no hurry to ease as rapidly as the market prices, with further promising inflation data still required in order to unlock the first rate reduction," said Michael Brown, a market analyst at Pepperstone.
The outcome of the meeting also pushed back against calls from labour advocates for reductions in order to protect the current low unemployment rate at a time when some feel there may be developing weaknesses in the economy.
BANK, CREDIT RISKS DROPPED
Those risks were brought home on Wednesday when New York Community Bank announced an unexpected loss, an echo of banking troubles last spring that the Fed hopes have been put to rest. The latest policy statement from the central bank's Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), however, removed language, put in place following the failures in 2023 of Silicon Valley Bank and other lenders, that said the banking system is "sound and resilient" - a fact that in normal times would not need to be stated.
The Fed also dropped references to the uncertain impact of tight credit on households and businesses and the "lags" with which changes in monetary policy are felt in the economy, a hint that US central bankers feel the current best-case outcome may endure absent some sort of unexpected shock.
Overall, the changes made to the policy statement codify what has been a developing Fed "pivot" that ends roughly two years in which the central bank's bias has been towards moving rates higher and the risks seen as tilted towards those posed by escalating prices.
"Our policy rate is likely at its peak for this tightening cycle and that, if the economy evolves broadly as expected, it will likely be appropriate to begin dialling back policy restraint at some point this year," Powell said.
Risks to the Fed's dual employment and inflation goals "are moving into better balance," the Fed's policy statement said. "In considering any adjustments to the target range for the federal funds rate, the Committee will carefully assess incoming data, the evolving outlook, and the balance of risks."
By contrast, the Fed's prior statement, issued on Dec 13, had laid out the conditions under which it would consider "any additional policy firming," language that excluded any consideration of rate cuts.
Fed officials did not issue new economic projections at their meeting this week. As of the Dec 12-13 meeting, policymakers envisioned cutting the policy rate by 75 basis points over the course of this year, an outlook that will be updated at the Fed's meeting in March.