• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Fed to reveal new projections with investors on alert for rate liftoff timing

September 20, 2021 by David Barret Leave a Comment

September 20, 2021

By Lindsay Dunsmuir

(Reuters) – U.S. Federal Reserve officials will lay bare how soon and how often they think the economy will need interest rates rises over the next three years when they release new forecasts at their policy meeting on Wednesday, with investors on alert for a faster pace of tightening.

The so-called “dot plot,” released quarterly, charts policymakers projections, on an anonymous basis, for economic growth, employment and inflation, as well as the timing of interest rate rises.

It will show whether most are sticking to recently expressed views that the Delta variant of the coronavirus, which has dented economic activity, will have a short-lived effect on the recovery despite the current turbulence and uncertainty it is causing. This week’s set of dots also will include policymakers’ forecasts for 2024 for the first time.

Interest rates have been near zero since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic with the Fed vowing not to raise borrowing costs until the economy has fully healed. According to the Fed’s new framework, that means a greater emphasis on achieving maximum employment along with its 2% average inflation goal.

Hotter-than expected inflation despite some recent moderation is testing policymakers’ commitment to that new framework and could cause the median of the Fed’s forecasts for a liftoff in interest rates to switch to 2022 from 2023 at the June meeting.

For that to happen, only three policymakers would need to bring forward their projections, and a shift of just two would result in a dead-heat split inside the Fed over whether liftoff is in the cards for next year or later.

“We all know the dots are not promises or commitments, but it’s still the best that the market has to go by to what policy will be in the future,” said Roberto Perli, an economist at Cornerstone Macro and former Fed staffer. “The risks are skewed to the upside.”

There are rising expectations the central bank will at least use its upcoming meeting on Sept. 21-22 to signal it plans to start reducing its massive bond purchases, also put in place in early 2020 to support the economy’s recovery, in November if incoming data holds up, amid the fastest economic recovery in history from a brief recession last year.

Fed officials argue the asset purchase program has run its usefulness given that demand, which it most directly affects, has rebounded even if the supply of both labor and goods has been constrained.

The scaling back could be completed as early as mid-2022, clearing the way for the Fed to lift interest rates from near zero any time after that.

The consensus among economists polled by Reuters is for rates to remain near zero until 2023 but more than one-quarter of respondents in the September survey forecast the Fed raising rates next year.

If the Fed’s 2022 and 2023 median interest rate projections stay the same, attention will focus on 2024 as investors parse the pace of rate rises once liftoff begins. It will also show how many policymakers, if any, still see interest rates on hold until at least 2024. In June, five out of the 18 policymakers saw rates staying pat until the end of 2023.

Currently, futures on the federal funds rate, which track short-term interest rate expectations, are pricing in one rate hike in 2023 and one or two additional increases in 2024, but the latest Primary Dealer survey, which the Fed consults to get a read on market expectations before each meeting, shows three additional rate hikes.

If the Fed pencils in three or more hikes at this week’s meeting for 2024, “that would deliver a hawkish sign that could more than offset any dovish messaging on tapering,” said Michael Pierce, an economist at Capital Economics.

MIXED BAG ON FORECASTS

The extent to which policymakers alter their other economic forecasts could also provide valuable insight. Few expect the Fed to change its expectation of the level to which interest rates could rise, currently seen as 2.5%, but their forecasts on U.S. economic growth this year and inflation projections this year and next could see revisions.

Economists have been downgrading their gross domestic product estimates for the current quarter, citing weak motor vehicle sales as inventory shortages persist, and a recent surge of COVID-19 infections fueled by the Delta variant of the coronavirus, although data released last Thursday showed U.S. retail sales unexpectedly increased in August.

Inflation estimates could prove more thorny. Fed Chair Jerome Powell, still awaiting word on whether he will be renominated to his post for a second term by U.S. President Joe Biden, has steadfastly kept to the view higher-than-expected inflation is transitory, although he and others have admitted it may linger longer than this year amid persistent supply constraints.

Last week, Labor Department data showed underlying consumer prices increased at their slowest pace in six months in August, suggesting that inflation had probably peaked.

Some other Fed officials are more alarmed and several have cited the possibility that higher inflation persists and causes a rise in inflation expectations as reason to taper asset purchases quickly to allow time for faster rate rises if required.

If the median projections show, for example, an additional rate hike in 2023 than currently forecast and indicate an earlier date for liftoff, Powell’s likely reiteration at his press conference following the meeting that tapering is not connected to rate hike decisions, could fall flat.

“The Board has drifted in the hawkish direction,” said Tim Duy, an economist at SGH Macro Advisors and an economics professor at University of Oregon, who expects the dots will show most policymakers now believe raising rates in 2022 will be appropriate, given rising concern about inflationary pressures. “The doves are now limited.”

(Reporting by Lindsay Dunsmuir; Additional reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by Andrea Ricci)

Source Link Fed to reveal new projections with investors on alert for rate liftoff timing

David Barret
David Barret

Related posts:

  1. US Health Officials Favor Covid Booster Shots To All Americans As Delta Variant Cases Rise
  2. Democrats’ tax plan would cut bills for most Americans -congressional estimate
  3. Larry Elder, right-wing radio host, seeks governorship in California recall
  4. Apple supplier Foxconn halts EV project with China’s Byton – Nikkei

Filed Under: News

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

  • Artificial Eclipse, Dancing Dinosaurs, And 50 Years Of “JAWS”
  • The Longest-Reigning Monarch In History Is Someone You’ve Never Heard Of
  • World’s First Microfiber Recycling Center Plans To Combat Ocean Pollution At Its Source – Our Homes
  • Dancing Dinosaurs May Have Used Site In Colorado As “Largest Lekking Arena In The World”
  • World’s Largest Digital Camera To Reveal Revolutionary First Images On Monday – And You Can Watch Live
  • Common Brain Parasite Infecting Up To 30 Percent Of Americans Disrupts Neuron Communication
  • First Clear Example Of A “Ghost” Mantle Plume Discovered Beneath Arabia
  • “Some People Took JAWS As A License To Kill”: 50 Years On, Can We Turn Fear To Fascination?
  • IFLScience The Big Questions: Would You Rather Go To Space Or The Bottom Of The Sea?
  • Cup Of Water On Tiangong Space Station Sparks Bizarre Conspiracy Theories
  • Simulations Of Early Solar Systems Find Up To 40 Percent Chance That Planet Nine Exists
  • The Last Time NASA’s Voyager “Looked Back” At Our Solar System, This Is What It Saw
  • What Are Those Tiny Dots On Apples?
  • Homo Erectus And Neanderthals May Have Been The First Humans To Do Math
  • Portuguese Man O’ War Found To Be Four Species Not One After 250 Years
  • Revolutionary Drug That’s “Closest Thing” To HIV Vaccine Gets FDA Approval
  • This Is Your Brain On ChatGPT: Lower Neural Interconnectivity And “Soulless” Work
  • In November 2026, A Human-Made Object Will Reach A Light-Day From Earth For First Time In History
  • Alan Turing Masterpieces “Almost Shredded” By Owners Fetch $625,000 At Auction
  • Salton Sea: California’s Largest And Most Polluted Lake Is Even More Toxic Than Thought
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version