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US central bank sticks to guns with rates hike

The US Federal Reserve has raised interest rates by a quarter of a percentage point but indicated it is on the verge of pausing further increases in borrowing costs amid recent turmoil in financial markets spurred by the collapse of two US banks.

The move set the US central bank’s benchmark overnight interest rate in the 4.75-5.00 per cent range, with updated projections showing 10 of 18

Fed policy makers still expect rates to rise another quarter of a percentage point by the end of this year, the same endpoint seen in the December projections.

But in a key shift driven by the sudden failures this month of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank, the Fed’s latest policy statement no longer says that “ongoing increases” in rates will likely be appropriate.

That language had been in every policy statement since the March 16, 2022 decision to start the rate hiking cycle.

Instead, the policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee said only that “some additional policy firming may be appropriate,” leaving open the chance that one more quarter-of-a-percentage-point rate increase, perhaps at the Fed’s next meeting, would represent at least an initial stopping point for the rate hikes.

Although the policy statement said the US banking system is “sound and resilient,” it also noted that recent stress in the banking sector is “likely to result in tighter credit conditions for households and businesses and to weigh on economic activity, hiring, and inflation”.

There were no dissents on the policy decision.

The document made no presumption that the battle with inflation has been won.

The new statement dropped language saying that inflation “has eased” and replaced it with the declaration that inflation “remains elevated”.
Job gains are “robust,” according to the Fed.

Officials projected the unemployment rate to end the year at 4.5 per cent, slightly below the 4.6 per cent seen as of December, while the outlook for economic growth fell slightly to 0.4 per cent from 0.5 per cent in the previous projections.

Inflation is now seen ending the year at 3.3 per cent compared to 3.1 per cent in the last projections.

The outcome of the two-day meeting this week marks an abrupt repositioning of the US central bank’s strategy from just two weeks ago, when Fed Chair Jerome Powell testified in Congress that hotter than expected inflation would likely force the central bank to raise interest rates higher and possibly faster than expected.

The March 10 collapse of California-based SVB and the subsequent collapse of New York-based Signature Bank highlighted broader concerns about the health of the banking sector, and raised the possibility that further Fed rate increases might tip the economy towards a financial crisis.

Federal Reserve policymakers believe beating back inflation may require just one more interest-rate hike this year but less easing next year than most thought would be appropriate just three months ago.

US central bankers see the policy rate, now in the 4.75-5.00 per cent range after Wednesday’s 25-basis-point increase, at 5.1 per cent by year end, according to the median estimate in the Fed’s latest quarterly summary of economic projections.

-AAP

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