Federal Reserve hikes rate, but cuts not on the table yet

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The Financial Post provided live coverage of the Fed’s decision to hike its key rate by 25 basis points on March 22. Read that coverage below.

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4:11 PM

Jerome Powell leaves the door open

By Kevin Carmichael 

The most anticipated “Fed Day” in memory is over. Stay tuned for the denouement, which could be as interesting as the climax.

Like European Central Bank president Christine Lagarde last week, United States Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell used his press conference to insist that he has the tools to fight inflation and maintain financial stability simultaneously.

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Inflation appears to remain the primary concern, and the Fed left the door open to further interest rate increases this year. “At the end of the day, we will do enough to bring down inflation,” Powell said. “No one should doubt that.”

The chair countered questions about the banking turmoil with assurances that the Fed was committed to getting to the bottom of what happened at Silicon Valley Bank and that the broader banking system is sound. And if that assessment is wrong, Powell said depositors needn’t worry about their savings. “You’ve seen that we have the tools to protect depositors,” he said. “We’re prepared to use those tools.”

Still, it seems likely that the trajectory for interest rates will be less dramatic than it might have been at the start of the month, when indicators suggested that inflation had re-accelerated. Powell said there’s a wide body of research that shows financial crises like the one we’re experiencing cause credit to tighten, and that in turn slows economic growth. The Fed chair said it’s too soon to know for sure, but it believes the events of the past couple of weeks probably have had the same impact as an interest rate increase.

“Financial conditions seem to have tightened, maybe more than traditional indicators say,” Powell said. “It could have a significant macro-economic effect.”

But not so big that the Fed wants anyone thinking the central bank might reverse course. The last question Powell received included an allusion to interest rate cuts. “Rate cuts are not in our base case,” he said.

— Kevin Carmichael

4 PM

BOOM!

Markets aren’t happy. In early count Dow Jones Industrial Average closed down 535.92 points, or 1.65 per cent, S&P 500 lost 66.35 points, or 1.66 per cent and the Nasdaq Composite lost 190.93 points, or 1.61 per cent.

3:48 PM

What the economists say

The unanimous Fed committee decision to raise policy rates by a quarter-point was no surprise to the Bank of Montreal economics team, but the central bank’s forward guidance tweak may have raised some eyebrows.

“Gone was the eight-times-employed phrase that the Committee ‘anticipates that ongoing increases in the target range will be appropriate,’” said BMO Economics deputy chief economist Michael Gregory. “It was replaced by the phrase that it ‘anticipates that some additional policy firming may be appropriate.’”

Gregory added that there was nothing specific in the guidance on whether further firming meant more rate hikes, so it’s possible further quantitative tightening could also meet this policy goal.

“The word “firming” could also mean simply allowing past rate hikes to come home to roost,” Gregory said. “In effect, the Fed has opened the door to a potential pause on May 3.”

BMO Economics though also believes the Fed still has one more quarter-point hike up its sleeve this year before hitting pause for the rest of the year.

— Stephanie Hughes

Walking and chewing gum at the same time

The economics team at the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce saw the Fed’s latest rate hike as a way to navigate two issues at once: reducing the pace of decades-high inflation and being careful not to worsen a U.S. banking crisis that unfolded over the past two weeks.

“The Fed decided that it could indeed walk and chew gum at the same time, pressing on with a quarter-point rate hike to quell inflation, and obviously relying on other interventions to address concerns over financial system stability,” said CIBC chief economist Avery Shenfeld in a note following the rate announcement.

Shenfeld added that the move reflected the committee’s view that the banking issues in the U.S. are a drag on growth and lending since a half-point hike was more clearly in the cards before the collapse of SVB.

He added that the median forecasts accompanying the Fed’s decision don’t show a rate cut until 2024. The possibility of more rate hikes this year seems more likely in CIBC’s eyes.

“For now, our call for one more 25 basis point hike this year, but no eases until 2024, seems in line with the FOMC’s thinking.”

— Stephanie Hughes

The (rate hiking cycle) end is nigh

The Royal Bank of Canada’s economics team took the Fed’s quarter-point hike as a largely anticipated dovish signal that the central bank’s aggressive rate hiking cycle could be nearing its end.

The smaller rise in the federal funds rate, on top of the softer tone on further increases that “some additional policy firming may be appropriate” rather than the usual call for “ongoing increases,” supported RBC Economics’ argument.

Economists also noted that committee members’ expectation for the terminal rate, or the ceiling the federal funds rate could hit, stayed between five and 5.25 per cent following the Silicon Valley Bank collapse.

“Prior to recent turmoil, comments from Chair Powell and other Fed speakers suggested terminal rate views were shifting higher in the wake of firmer-than-expected data,” said RBC senior economist Josh Nye. “But recent developments seem to have nixed that, lending today’s decision a dovish tone.”

Nye added that that tone and guidance at the very least suggest that policymakers are more wary of the risks of over-tightening. “And if today’s hike isn’t the last, we’re getting very close to terminal,” Nye said.

— Stephanie Hughes

3:42 PM

Don’t forget Janet

Janet Yellen stole some thunder from Fed chair Jerome Powell when she said today that the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) was not considering providing “blanket insurance” for banking deposits following the collapse of two U.S. banks this month.

The U.S. Treasury Secretary was speaking at the same time as Powell’s press conference at a hearing of the U.S. Senate’s Appropriations Subcommittee on Financial Services and General Government.

3:26 PM

The press conference

Soft landing still possible?

It’s been an extraordinary couple of weeks and few Wall Street analysts are talking about the “soft landing” that many had convinced themselves was possible at the start of the month.

But the chair of the Federal Reserve hasn’t given up hope. “There’s a pathway,” he said.

When inflation surged last year, most on Wall Street assumed it would be all but impossible to reverse the upward pressure on prices without forcing a “hard landing,” Wall Street jargon for a jump in unemployment and a tough recession. That’s the only way inflation bursts were snuffed out in the past. Why would this time be different?

Except it was starting to look like this time was different. Labour markets remained strong despite higher interest rates. A consensus emerged that central banks might have achieved the improbable. But that consensus was upended by the banking crisis. Now, most assume a recession is in store.

Maybe. But Powell thinks a soft landing still is possible. “That pathway still exists,” he said. “We’re certainly trying to find it.”

— Kevin Carmichael

3:11 PM

The Fed press corps is as interested about financial stability as it is about inflation.

Powell was asked for his opinion about what went wrong at Silicon Valley Bank. He didn’t want to prejudge the Fed’s review, but he did offer this nugget: “management failed badly.”

He also noted that the run on SVB happened “faster than the historical record would suggest,” implying regulators may have to update their approach to oversight for the internet age.

Powell insisted that SVB was an “outlier” in a number of ways, so there is no reason to assume the banking system is in trouble because of problems at a few smaller banks.

– Kevin Carmichael

3 PM

What went wrong?

Is the financial system strain contained? That’s the first question reporters put to Fed chair Jerome Powell in Washington following the central bank’s quarter-point rate hike after two weeks of banking sector turbulence stemming from the SVB collapse.

“Our view is that the banking system is sound and it’s resilient,” Powell said. “It’s got strong capital and liquidity, which have powerful actions with Treasury and the FDIC, which demonstrate that all depositors’ savings are safe, that the banking system is safe. Deposit flows in the banking system have stabilized over the last week.”

Powell added that the Fed is undertaking a thorough internal review to find areas where it could strengthen supervision and regulation.

“My only interest is that we identify what went wrong here,” Powell said later on in the press conference. “How did this happen is the question. What went wrong? Try to find that, we will find that, and then make an assessment of what are the right policies to put in place so it doesn’t happen again, and then implement those policies.”

— Stephanie Hughes

2:52 PM

Off the top of the press conference, Powell got questions about whether the Fed was worried about a rate increase exacerbating the banking turmoil and the possibility that the Fed could pause.

The chair avoided saying much about the financial crisis, insisting it was “too soon” to draw conclusions. He did say tighter credit conditions could act like a rate increase, implying that fewer increases will be needed than anticipated earlier this month. Powell said the committee considered a pause, but opted to focus on inflation, which remains a worry.

— Kevin Carmichael

2:39 PM

Dot Plot signals Not done yet

It seems the Fed is determined to raise interest rates at least one more time after today.

The policy committee’s “dot plot,” which graphs the expectations of each member, shows that all but one think the benchmark rate is headed higher in 2023. Ten project that another quarter point increase will be sufficient this year. Three others said the target will need to rise to 5.25 per cent and 5.5 per cent, and another three concluded the target will need to go to between 5.5 per cent and 5.75 per cent to crush inflation.

A single member tabled a forecast that had the benchmark target at 5.75 per cent to six per cent at the end of the year.

– Kevin Carmichael

2:30 PM

Press Conference starts

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2:25 PM

Here comes the #Fed press conference.
Hopefully, Chair #Powell has internalized the content and implications of the study and, this time around, will neither add to volatility nor reverse the #markets' initial reactions to the FOMC statement.#economy #federalreserve #econtwitter https://t.co/tIzYqgy5M3

— Mohamed A. El-Erian (@elerianm) March 22, 2023

2 PM

The Federal Reserve hikes rate by 25 basis points!

Read the statement

  • The Federal Reserve raised interest rates by a quarter of a percentage point, but suggests it could be closer to pausing because of the turmoil in financial markets caused by a series of banking crises
  • The Fed’s latest policy statement no longer says that “ongoing increases” in rates will likely be appropriate, language that has been in every statement since March 2022
  • The benchmark overnight interest rate is now in the 4.75-5.00 per cent range
  • On the banking crisis, the Fed says the U.S. banking system is “sound and resilient”, but notes 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.”

Fed’s decision Federal Reserve hikes rate, says ‘additional’ tightening possible

1:50 PM

Countdown to decision: Ten minutes

1:30 PM.

BREAKING!

The Bank of Canada releases deliberations to the monetary policy decision on March 8. Read them here 

And Here’s our take …

Powell’s problems aren’t our problems

Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem and his deputies in deliberations before the March rate hold wondered if tight labour markets in Canada would continue to exert upward pressure on core inflation as has happened in the United States. They concluded that Canada has important differences. They observed that faster immigration rates and a stronger rebound in labour participation rates — especially among women — were helping to satiate Canadian demand for workers.

They also observed that Canada has a debt problem. “More elevated levels of household debt and differences in the structure of the mortgage market mean that demand in Canada could be more sensitive to higher interest rates,” the summary said.

Unsustainable employment

Policymakers tend to demure when asked to pinpoint the level of unemployment they associate with an economy that’s running too hot. For those who are curious, current conditions would appear to contain some clues. Policymakers “agreed that the labour market remained very tight and was still operating above maximum sustainable levels,” the summary said.

They were surprised that most aggressive series of interest rate hikes in the Bank of Canada’s history hadn’t done more to cool hiring. “While the Bank had expected to see some easing in labour market conditions, recent data suggest that the degree of tightness has not substantially changed over the past six months,” it said.

Governing Council debated whether increases in employment were from demand or supply, but if members concluded anything, the Bank of Canada opted against sharing it.

Hint to governments

Policymakers noted that government spending was stronger than they had anticipated in the fourth quarter. If politicians keep it up, interest rates might have to rise. Macklem and his deputies will be watching budget season closely.

“Governing Council also noted that, at 3.9 per cent, growth in government spending in the fourth quarter was stronger than expected,” the summary said. “They observed that sustained growth in government spending that is considerably faster than potential growth would boost domestic demand. The Bank will incorporate announced fiscal plans by federal and provincial governments into its updated projection in the next MPR on April 12.”

— Kevin Carmichael

1:22 PM

Copper for hope and gold for fear

As the Fed considers raising interest rates this afternoon, investors weighing how to balance their exposure to copper and gold face one of the trickiest calls in years.

Copper has long been considered a proxy for global economic growth: Its versatility as a construction material, an electrical conductor and much more means that its demand should rise as the macroeconomic horizon brightens.

By contrast, gold is a hedge against inflation — if the economy and the U.S. dollar all tank it should hold its value and perhaps even rise.

So whether to invest in copper or gold depends on what you think is going to happen to the economy: Are we on the precipice of a banking liquidity crisis or will those concerns dissipate as inflation returns to normal levels?

Jackie Przybylowski, a metals and mining analyst at BMO Capital Markets, wrote earlier this week that mining and metal investors began March with widespread optimism.

The key words are “began the month” because troubles at Credit Suisse and other banks have pretty much ended that.

“Only a couple short weeks ago, I was thinking that we should maybe start to think about valuation [of miners] purely on Net Asset Value [basis] to put more emphasis on the longer-term cash flows and growth opportunities,” Przybylowski wrote in a March 20 note titled ‘Themes from the Road: Optimism Wiped Out (For Now)’.

Instead of looking long-term, however, she wrote that global economic fallout from the banking liquidity crisis has created immediate concerns anew about “inflation of operating and capital costs” and the likelihood that a recession could lessen demand for copper and other metals.

As a result, investor focus is shifting back to the near-term cashflows and the risks from rising interest rates.

Gold miners would also face the near-term risks that rising interest rates would raise operating costs, but have the benefit of producing a metal that hedges against inflation. Accordingly, Pzyrbylowski wrote that some investors are taking a second look at gold miners, and interest in the sector may be rising, albeit tepidly.

“What a difference a couple weeks makes,” she wrote.

Whether the Fed decides to hike interest rates, and if so by how much, will provide one new data point about how to think about the dual risks on the horizon, inflation and slowdown.

— Gabriel Friedman

12:10 PM

Keep your powder dry

The reporters and editors of the Financial Post don’t give investing advice — we let our sources and contributors do that.

But if we did, we might advise caution in the aftermath of the Fed decision. Interpretations of the Fed’s thinking can change between the time the Federal Open Market Committee releases its press release at 2 p.m. and the time chair Jerome Powell concludes his press conference an hour or so later.

“If recent history is any indication, the market response could flip between the statement release and the press conference, with reversals likely to occur throughout the question-and-answer period,” Karl Schamotta, chief market strategist Cambridge Mercantile Corp. and one of the keener observers of the world outside Bay Street, advised his clients in a note this morning.

“Mr. Powell is an incredibly gifted communicator, but misinterpretations could prove almost impossible to avoid,” Schamotta said.

Powell’s perceived communications challenge is finding a “Goldilocks” message that will convince investors and the larger public that the Fed is committed to crushing inflation, while also sensitive to what higher interest rates are doing to financial stability.

This week, traders are more concerned about the latter. Powell, who is paid to take a longer term view, might be more worried about losing his grip on inflation. Rarely has there been a Fed decision with this much tension. There will be lots of room for error.

Schamotta thinks the Fed will opt to raise interest rates, but acknowledged a hold is possible.

“Another hike could well prove to be the straw that breaks the camel’s back, piling additional stress on interest rate sensitive sectors like technology and commercial real estate,” he said. “But a pause could signal deeper unease about risks lurking deep beneath the surface of the financial system, triggering widespread panic.”

Commentators compare Powell to former Fed chair Paul Volcker. If he gets through today, Powell might have earned his place in the Fed pantheon.

— Kevin Carmichael

12 noon

Market update: The Dow dips into the red by 0.12 per cent or about 40 points, S&P 500 pretty much flat and Nasdaq up about 20 points as traders continue to tread water. Canada’s TSX is up about 30 points.

11:12 AM

What’s the cost of a 25-point hike?

The Fed is stuck between a rock and a hard place, say Monex analysts Simon Harvey and Jay Zhao-Murray.

Since the collapse of three U.S. banks, including Silicon Valley bank, and the wider catastrophic ripple it cast across the global banking sector, a half-point increase today is looking a lot less likely. This upcoming decision has the Fed walking a thin line between stamping out high inflation and not rocking the boat further with more aggressive hikes.

The most likely choices are a 25 basis points today to bring the federal funds rate up to a range of 4.75 and five per cent – or to potentially pause altogether.

“At its core, this debate centres on the Fed’s sensitivity to price stability versus financial stability,” said Harvey and Zhao-Murray in a note. “While policymakers should be cautious given higher rates triggered the current flight of deposits and the liquidity troubles within the U.S. banking sector, we believe that similarly to the ECB, policymakers within the Fed should try to delineate their responsibilities and the tools at their disposal.”

The analysts added that if U.S. Treasury officials are successful in expanding the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation’s deposit insurance threshold above its current cap of $250,000 without requiring congressional approval, it could give the Fed some wiggle room to hike rates further without escalating bank crisis contagion.

Just looking at the economic fundamentals, these analysts say more rate hikes should be on the table. The annualized six per cent pace of inflation recorded in February is still a far cry from the Fed’s two per cent target.

That said, these analysts aren’t blind to the effects further tightening could have.

“A tightening in financial conditions through the credit channel would naturally weigh on inflation, but it would come at the cost of a recession and the failure of the Fed to fulfil its dual mandate,” they wrote.

— Stephanie Hughes

10:36 AM

The Canadian angle

The Fed’s decision will have implications for the Bank of Canada. All things equal, a Fed that’s less keen to raise interest rates would make it easier for Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem to stick with his decision to keep rates where they are. But if the Fed decides to stay aggressive, the ripples could force Macklem to raise interest rates even though the inflation story is getting better in Canada.

Here’s Kevin Carmichael’s take on what the banking turmoil and new inflation numbers say about what Canadian policymakers might be thinking about today.

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10:20 AM

So what is the Street saying?

This morning markets are pricing in about 84 per cent odds that the Fed will raise rates by a quarter point to a range of 4.75 to 5 per cent, the highest since 2007 on the eve of the global financial crisis.

10 AM

Here’s a quick catchup of how we got to where we are today.

In early March Fed chair Jerome Powell said the Fed would have to raise rates higher than expected. On March 10, Silicon Valley Bank went into receivership, the second largest bank to fail in U.S. history. Two days later Signature Bank was closed by regulators.

Since then UBS has bought Credit Suisse in a historic rescue engineered by Swiss authorities and the world’s major central banks banded together to boost liquidity in global markets.

This is the dilemma the Fed faces today. Should it pause to shore up financial stability or press on with rate hikes?

“It is incredibly hard to believe that two weeks ago we were debating just how hawkish Jay Powell was going to be at his semi-annual congressional testimony,” economist David Rosenberg wrote in a note this morning.

“What is really disturbing is how he could sound so hawkish and so convinced that rates were going to stay higher for longer, and not even know what was really happening in his own backyard.”

Just to give you an idea of the pressure the Fed is facing, here’s a chart on rate hiking cycles in the past.

9:30 AM ET

And we’re off …

A muted open on Wall Street as traders wait for the decision. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 9.59 points, or 0.03 per cent, S&P 500 slipped 0.83 points, or 0.02 per cent, while the Nasdaq Composite dropped 2.61 points, or 0.02 per cent at the opening bell.

With additional reporting by Reuters and Bloomberg