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– Cook: More Rate Cuts ‘Likely’ but Size, Timing to Depend on Data
– Schmid: “It Remains to Be Seen’ How Much Lower Rates Should Go
By Steven K. Beckner
(MaceNews) – Federal Reserve policymakers have continued this week to signal caution on further interest rate reductions.
When the Fed’s policymaking Federal Open Market Committee initially slashed the federal funds rate on Sept. 18, FOMC participants projected the policy rate would need to be lowered an additional 200 basis points, and Chair Jerome Powell openly talked about proceeding to cut the funds rate toward “neutral” after the FOMC cut it again on Nov. 7.
Since then, Fed officials have sounded somewhat less decisive about additional rate cuts, mirroring Powell’s “careful” and “patient” approach.
Fed Governor Lisa Cook said Wednesday that further rate cuts are “likely,” but said “the magnitude and timing of rate cuts will depend on incoming data, the evolving outlook, and the balance of risks.”
While additional monetary easing may be appropriate, it could become appropriate to “pause” that process, she said.
The day before, Kansas City Federal Reserve Bank President Jeff Schmid was even more ambivalent about further funds rate cuts, saying “it remains to be seen” how much lower rates might need to go.
The Cook and Schmid remarks are consistent with what Powell said last Thursday when he made known the Fed is in no “hurry” to keep lowering interest rates and vowed to move “carefully” in determining how much more monetary easing might be needed.
Other Fed officials, including some usually thought of as being on the “dovish” end of the policy spectrum, have made similar indications.
FOMC participants will be publishing a fresh set of economic forecasts and rate projections in December, and Powell has noted the Fed will have in hand a lot of additional data on inflation and employment by that time. Conceivably, the eagerly awaited rate “dot plot” could look very different from what was released on Sept. 18.
At that time, the 19 Fed governors and presidents projected that the funds rate would end 2024 at 4.4% (a range of 4.25-4.50%), implying another 25 basis point rate cut next month. For next year they projected it will fall to 3.4% (3.25-3.50%), before ending 2026 at 2.9% (2.75-3.00%).
At 2.9%, the funds rate would coincide with the FOMC’s estimate of the ‘longer run” or “neutral” rate, which has been continually revised higher. Some officials, such as Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan, think it needs to be revised higher yet to reflect what they believe is a climbing “real” interest rate.
Recent data have not given the Fed a clear path forward. The economy has been growing well above the Fed’s estimate of its non-inflationary potential, driven by consumer spending. Although job gains have slowed, unemployment remains historically low at 4.1%. And inflation is still running well above the Fed’s 2% target. In October, the core consumer price index was up 3.3% from a year earlier.
Another key development that could tend to give Powell & co. pause (literally) is the post- election rally to record highs on Wall Street.
Cook, who is usually thought of as one of the more “dovish’ policymakers, leaned toward further rate cuts in a speech at the University of Virginia, but was not as assertive about that as she and others had previously been.
“(T)he totality of the data suggests that a disinflationary trajectory is still in place and that the labor market is gradually cooling,” she said. “As such, I view the risks to achieving the Federal Reserve’s dual mandate of maximum employment and price stability as being roughly in balance.”
“Consistent with those balanced risks, in my view, it likely will be appropriate to move the policy rate toward a more neutral stance over time,” she added.
Cook said the FOMC has already taken “a strong step toward removing policy restriction” with its cumulative 75 basis points of easing in September and November.
“Going forward, I still see the direction of the appropriate policy rate path to be downward, but the magnitude and timing of rate cuts will depend on incoming data, the evolving outlook, and the balance of risks,” she said.
Echoing Powell, she said, “I do not view policy as being on a preset course, and I am ready to respond to a changing outlook.”
Cook added that she would consider “a range of scenarios when thinking about the path of policy.”
In one scenario, she said, “If the labor market and inflation continue to progress in line with my forecast, it could well be appropriate to lower the level of policy restriction over time until we near the neutral rate of interest, or the point when monetary policy is neither stimulating nor restricting economic growth.”
“However, if inflation progress slows and the labor market remains solid, I could see a scenario where we pause along the downward path,” she went on.
“Alternatively, should the labor market weaken in a substantial way, it could be appropriate to ease policy more quickly,” Cook added.
Cook said she “remain(s) confident that inflation is moving sustainably toward our 2% objective, even if the path is occasionally bumpy.”
While citing “significant progress on disinflation,” she said “the elevated core figure suggests that we have further to go before credibly achieving our inflation target of 2%. Although most price indicators suggest that progress is ongoing, I anticipate bumps along the road.”
Cook said her “confidence in continued disinflation is further reinforced by the moderation in wage growth.”
She seemed more concerned about the employment side of the Fed’s mandate, saying she sees employment risks as “weighted to the downside,” although she said “those risks appear to have diminished somewhat in recent months.”
Cook expressed concern that “national job growth is solid but perhaps not quite strong enough to keep unemployment at the current low rate. Net hiring so far this year is running somewhat below estimates for what economists call the breakeven pace, or the rate of hiring needed to keep the unemployment rate constant, when accounting for changes to the size of the labor force.”
“With job growth coming in below the breakeven pace, which was likely more than 200,000 jobs a month over the past year, the unemployment rate has risen from a historical low of 3.4% in April 2023 to 4.1 percent in October,” she noted.
Cook said the labor market “has largely normalized after being overheated,” but said she “will continue to watch incoming data carefully and remain attuned to signs of undesirable further cooling in the labor market.”
Schmid, who will be voting on the FOMC in 2025, described the combined 75 basis points of rate cuts thus far as “an acknowledgement of the Committee’s growing confidence that inflation is on a path to reach the Fed’s 2% objective—a confidence based in part on signs that both labor and product markets have come into better balance in recent months.”
However, he stopped well short of advocating further easing. “While now is the time to begin dialing back the restrictiveness of monetary policy, it remains to be seen how much further interest rates will decline or where they might eventually settle.” he said in remarks prepared for delivery to the Omaha, Nebraska Chamber of Commerce.
Schmid went on to explore the implications of soaring federal budget deficits for interest rates:
He recalled that prior to the pandemic “increased demand from financial institutions as well as strong growth in China and emerging markets had boosted demand for such assets, bidding up their price and holding down interest rates across the yield curve.”
But now, Schmid said, the situation is different and market interest rates could come under more upward pressure. That, in turn, can’t help but influence Fed-administered rates, he suggested: “(N)ow this demand (for Treasury securities) has cooled, even as the supply of government debt has jumped and is expected to continue growing at a very rapid rate,” he said. “As such, it is possible that the balance of demand and supply for government debt will shift from a factor holding down interest rates to a factor boosting interest rates.”
Schmid said “shifts in supply and demand for safe assets influence interest rates independent of the Fed’s actions,” but that doesn’t mean market rate movements have no impact on monetary policy, in the Kansas City Fed president’s view.
“Though the Fed is not a passive bystander and plays a role in setting short-term interest rates, it can’t perpetually deviate rates from market forces without risking its mandates for maximum employment and price stability,” he explained. “In this way, the Fed takes fiscal decisions as given and steers monetary policy in the appropriate direction to achieve its dual mandate ….”
Schmid added that “large fiscal deficits will not be inflationary because the Fed will do its job and achieve its inflation objective, though in doing so, the outcome could be persistently higher interest rates ….”
Fed Governor Michelle Bowman, known for being more hawkish than most of her colleagues, also called for “caution” Wednesday on the grounds that inflation remains a threat.
“(W)e have not yet met our inflation goal and, … progress in lowering inflation appears to have stalled,” she told the Forum Club of West Palm Beach, Florida. “I see greater risks to the price stability side of our mandate, especially while the labor market remains near full employment, but it is also possible that we could see a deterioration in labor market conditions.”
She called for “a dose of humility” in assessing economic data and making forecasts. “In light of the dissonance created by conflicting economic signals, measurement challenges, and data revisions, I remain cautious about taking signal from only a limited set of real-time data releases…. (U)ncertainty surrounding available data and the many variables that can affect future economic conditions suggest that we should pursue a cautious approach.”
Bowman dissented against the FOMC’s 50 basis point September rate cut, because she favored a more modest move. She said she voted for the 25 basis point cut because “it aligns with my preference to lower the policy rate gradually, especially in light of elevated inflation and the uncertainty about the level of the neutral rate.”
Her estimate of the neutral policy rate is “much higher than it was before the pandemic, and therefore we may be closer to a neutral policy stance than we currently think,” Bowman said.
Therefore, she said she “would prefer to proceed cautiously in bringing the policy rate down to better assess how far we are from the end point, while recognizing that we have not yet achieved our inflation goal and closely watching the evolution of the labor market.”
“We should also not rule out the risk that the policy rate may attain or even fall below its neutral level before we achieve our price stability goal,” Bowman added.
She said she was “pleased” that the FOMC’s November policy statement “included a flexible, data-dependent approach, providing the Committee with optionality in deciding future policy adjustments…. (M)y view is that inflation remains a concern, and I continue to see price stability as essential for fostering a strong labor market and an economy that works for everyone in the longer term.”
Later Wednesday, Boston Fed President Susan Collins, another 2025 voter, was much more emphatic about the need for additional rate cuts, but she too favored a “careful and deliberate” approach.
Citing inflation moderation and cooling labor markets, Collins said “it was appropriate to begin recalibrating monetary policy this fall.” And she said she “expect(s_ additional adjustments will likely be appropriate over time, to move the
policy rate gradually from its current restrictive stance back into a more neutral range.”
Echoing Powell, she said “policy is not on a pre-set path. The FOMC will need to make decisions meeting-by-meeting, based on the data available at the time and their implications for
the economic outlook and the evolving balance of risks.”
But Collins made clear she is more prepared to ease policy, saying it “needs to adjust in order to achieve our dual mandate goals.”
“While the final destination is uncertain, I believe some additional policy easing is needed, as policy currently remains at least somewhat restrictive,” she continued. “The intent is not to ease too quickly or too much, hindering the disinflation progress to date. At the same time, easing too slowly or too little could unnecessarily weaken the labor market.”
Collins said “there are risks to achieving both our inflation and our employment goals. On the inflation side, demand has been surprisingly resilient, and we could see more consumption growth than anticipated, putting upward pressure on prices…..”
“On the other hand, …. job growth is moderating, with recent gains concentrated in just a few sectors,” she went on “At this stage, any further slowing in hiring would be undesirable. In addition, an economy growing near trend may be morE vulnerable to adverse shocks – and geopolitical risks remain elevated.”
Collins said she see( risks to her “quite favorable baseline outlook” as “roughly in balance.” “Inflation is returning sustainably, if unevenly, to 2%, and to date, labor market conditions are healthy overall,” she elaborated. “Policy is well-positioned to deal with two-sided risks and achieve our dual mandate goals in a reasonable amount of time.”
Collins added that “the policy adjustments made so far enable the FOMC to be careful and deliberate going forward, taking the time to holistically assess implications of the available data for the outlook and the associated balance of risks.”
–Q3 GDP +0.2% Q/Q, +0.9% Annualized Vs. Median Forecasts of +0.2%, +0.6%
–External Demand’s Unexpected Dive Buoyed by Surprisingly Firmer Consumption Despite High Costs, Earthquake, Typhoons
–Domestic Demand Pushes Up GDP by 0.6 Point, Net Exports Slashes Growth by 0.4 Point
By Max Sato
(MaceNews) – Japan’s third quarter economic growth slowed to 0.2% on quarter, on pullbacks in business investment and public works spending, as expected, but an unexpected slip in external demand amid sapping Chinese demand and global uncertainties was offset by surprisingly solid consumer spending on vehicles amid high costs for necessities and stormy Q3 weather.
At a glance, the Q3 performance released by the Cabinet Office on Friday was not so bad as some economists had feared, with its annualized rate firmer at +0.9% vs. consensus +0.6%, but it was partly buoyed by the downward revision to the Q2 gross domestic product to +0.5% q/q from +0.7% and to +2.2% annualized from +2.9%.
The Q2 rebound was still led by private consumption, which accounts for about 55% of the GDP, and solid corporate capital investment. In the January-March quarter, the economy slumped 0.6% (annualized -2.4%) for the first contraction in two quarters, hit by suspended output at Toyota group factories over a safety test scandal that had a widespread impact beyond the auto industry.
Domestic demand added a strong 0.6 percentage point to total domestic output in Q3 (well above the consensus call of +0.1 point) after boosting the Q2 GDP by 0.7 point. External demand (exports minus imports) pushed down the overall GDP figure by 0.4 point, instead of the median forecast of +0.1 point, marking the third straight quarter of providing a negative contribution.
Only Modest Q4 GDP Rise Expected
Looking ahead, the economy in October-December is expected to show only modest growth as many households have been struggling to make ends meet amid high costs for food and fuels even though large firms are raising wages to cope with widespread labor shortages. Firms may increase investment in capacity in Q4 compared to Q3.
From a year earlier, the economy posted its first increase in three quarters, up 0.3% as projected by economists, after falling 1.0% previously.
Key components in percentage change on quarter except for private inventories and net exports, whose contributions are in percentage points. Figures in the previous quarter are in parentheses:
Domestic demand +0.6 point, 2nd straight rise (+0.8 point)
Private consumption +0.9%, 2nd straight rise after 4 drops (+0.7%)
Business investment -0.2%, 3rd drop in 5 quarters (+0.9%)
Public investment plus -0.9%, 4th drop in 5 quarters (+4.1%)
Private inventories +0.1 point, 2nd rise in 5 quarters (-0.1 point)
Net exports (external demand) -0.4 point, 4th drop in 5 quarters (-0.1 point)
The Cabinet Office estimates that in order for real GDP to hit the official forecast of 0.7% growth in fiscal 2024, the economy would have to grow 0.85% on quarter, or an annualized 3.5% in each of the two remaining quarters in the fiscal year ending next March. It may be too high a goal given still sluggish domestic consumption amid high costs, uncertainty over global growth and what many fear as an inflationary economic policy under President-elect Trump, who has promised to levy high tariffs on U.S. imports and boost growth with tax cuts.
October Trade Data Seen Sluggish
Japanese trade data for October due Nov. 20 is likely to show exports to China suffered their second straight year-on-year drop, hit by property market problems in the world’s second largest economy. Even exports to the resilient U.S. economy are set to post their third consecutive slip and shipments to the European Union remain weak, probably down for a seventh month in a row.
Japanese export values are forecast to show a rebound in October, up 3.0% (range -1.0% to +8.6%), after falling 1.7% in September for their first year-on-year drop in 10 months. An increase in semiconductor-producing equipment appears to be partly offset by drops in automobiles, mineral fuels and iron/steel. Import values are expected to mark their first decline in seven months, down 1.8% (range -6.5% to +4.4%), on crude oil, semiconductors and smartphones, following a 2.1% rise the previous month.
The trade balance is forecast to post a deficit of ¥132.2 billion (range a deficit of ¥360.4 billion to a surplus of ¥54.5 billion) for a fourth consecutive shortfall a revised ¥294.1 billion in deficit in September and compared with a ¥702.86 billion deficit in October 2023 and a record shortfall of ¥3,506.43 billion (¥3.51 trillion) in January 2023.
Japan’s economy grew a real 0.8% in fiscal 2023, which is now clearly below the official forecast of a 1.6% rise, after expanding 1.6% in fiscal 2022, which was slightly under the official projection of 1.7%. It followed a 3.1% gain in fiscal 2021 and decreases of 3.9% in fiscal 2020 and 0.8% in fiscal 2019.
In the latest GDP data, the unadjusted deflator rose 2.5% on year in Q3 after rising 3.1% in Q2 while the seasonally adjusted deflator gained 0.3% on quarter after surging 1.2%.
Japan Inflation Drifting Above BOJ’s 2% Target amid High Food, Energy Costs
In the Nov. 22 data, consumer inflation in Japan is expected to ease further to 2.2% in the core reading in October from 2.4% in September and 2.8% in August. The government’s temporary revival of utility subsidies for suppliers is lowering electricity and natural gas bill payments from September until November. Ruling party officials are considering resuming a similar scheme nearly next year to help ease the pain of many households hit by high costs for necessities for more than two years in light of the pandemic-era global supply chain breakdown and Russia’s war in Ukraine.
The year-on-year increase in the total CPI is forecast at 2.3%, also down from 2.5% in September. By contrast, underlying inflation measured by the core-core CPI (excluding fresh food and energy) is seen at 2.3%, up from 2.1% the previous month, as this relatively younger series is unaffected by energy prices.
BOJ on Course to Keep Unwinding Massive Cash Injections
The Bank of Japan, which expects inflation to be anchored around its 2% target by early 2026, is on course for at least three more 25 basis point rate hikes that would take the overnight interest rate target to 1% by late 2025 as part of its gradual normalization process after more than a decade of large-scale easing.
The reflationary policy mix of massive cash injections into the financial system by the central bank, increased fiscal spending and promises of growth strategies was used by the late former prime minister Shinzo Abe, whose pet project was to rewrite Japan’s post-WWII pacifist constitution, to take his conservative Liberal Democratic Party back to power in a sweeping win in general elections in late 2012.
The LDP has been criticized by advocates for improving the livelihood of lower to middle income households since the inception of what they call a “misguided” massive printing of banknotes. A series of short-lived governments under the ruling coalition, which was pushed into a minority government in general elections about three weeks ago, have also come under fire for resorting to band-aid solutions of cash handouts and business subsidies, instead of formulating more effective programs to support women joining or going back to work and helping unemployment among the youth and those near retirement.
– FOMC Will Proceed ‘Carefully,’ ‘Patiently’ Toward ‘Neutral’ Funds Rate
– FOMC May Slow Pace of Easing As It Approaches Neutral Range
– Level of Neutrality Uncertain; So Should Move ‘Slowly and Carefully’
By Steven K. Beckner
(MaceNews) – Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell declared Thursday that the Fed is in no “hurry” to keep lowering interest rates and vowed to move “carefully” in determining how much more rate reductions are needed in pursuit of its dual mandate goals of “maximum employment” and “price stability.”
Powell said the Fed wants to cut the key federal funds rate to a “neutral” level that is neither expansionary or contractionary, but said uncertainty about where neutrality lies requires moving “slowly” and “carefully.”
As the funds rate approaches a neutral range, the Fed will likely slow the pace of rate cuts, he told the Dallas Regional Chamber and World Affairs Council.
Powell reiterated that the Fed’s policymaking Federal Open Market Committee wants to avoid either cutting rates too far and fast or lowering them too little.
The Fed chief declined to get into questions about the monetary implications of President-elect Donald Trump’s proposed tax, trade and other policy proposals, but he defended central bank independence and said he plans to continue as Fed Chairman through the end of his term in January 2028.
Powell’s remarks come on the heels of October inflation data, which show price increases continuing to exceed the Fed’s 2% target. On Wednesday, the Labor Department reported that its Consumer Price Index rose 0.2% in October, leaving it up 2.6% from a year earlier – a modest acceleration from the 2.4% September pace. The core CPI rose 0.3% or 3.3% from a year earlier.
Inflation at the wholesale level also picked up last month. The Producer Price Index rose 0.2% or 2.4% for the 12 months ended in October, up from 1.9% in September.
Powell was speaking a week after the FOMC cut the funds rate for a second straight meeting. Last Thursday, he and his colleagues lowered the policy rate by 25 basis points to a target range of 4.50% to 4.75%, following a 50 basis point cut on Sept. 18.
In his post-FOMC press conference, Powell declined to give any “forward guidance” on further rate cuts, but said the FOMC will likely be moving the funds rate further to a “more neutral level … patiently, carefully” and “gradually.”
Powell spoke in much that same cautionary vein Thursday.
He began by saying that “the recent performance of our economy has been remarkably good” and “has made significant progress toward our dual-mandate goals of maximum employment and stable prices.”
“The labor market remains in solid condition,” he said. “Inflation has eased substantially from its peak, and we believe it is on a sustainable path to our 2% goal.”
As he elaborated, though, Powell seemed not entirely comfortable with economic conditions. He pointed to rising unemployment, although he said it remains ‘historically low” at 4.1%. And while noting that inflation is “down significantly” and “running much closer to our 2% longer-run goal,” he said “it is not there yet.”
“We are committed to finishing the job,” he continued in prepared remarks. “With labor market conditions in rough balance and inflation expectations well anchored, I expect inflation to continue to come down toward our 2 percent objective, albeit on a sometimes-bumpy path.”
Responding to questions, Powell said the October increase in the PPI was “slightly more of an upward bump than we expected.”
Powell said he and his fellow policymakers “are confident that with an appropriate recalibration of our policy stance, strength in the economy and the labor market can be maintained, with inflation moving sustainably down to 2%.”
“We see the risks to achieving our employment and inflation goals as being roughly in balance, and we are attentive to the risks to both sides,” he continued. “We know that reducing policy restraint too quickly could hinder progress on inflation. At the same time, reducing policy restraint too slowly could unduly weaken economic activity and employment.”
Powell said the FOMC is “moving policy over time to a more neutral setting,” but reiterated that ‘the path for getting there is not preset” but will be data-dependent.
He emphasized that the FOMC can be deliberate in easing policy now that it has cut the funds rate by 75 basis points.
“The economy is not sending any signals that we need to be in a hurry to lower rates,” he said. “The strength we are currently seeing in the economy gives us the ability to approach our decisions carefully.”
Powell doubled down on that cautious and patient approach in response to questions.
He said uncertainty about the level of neutrality and other uncertainties “argues for moving carefully.”
“Policy is restrictive, but we can’t say how restrictive,” he said, adding that “restrictive” policy is “weighing on the economy; it’s cooling down … pretty much as we hoped it would; the labor market has not quite stabilized but is in a good place.”
In those circumstances, Powell said the FOMC is “moving back down to neutral … carefully and patiently.”
If the economy or the labor market were to weaken suddenly, he said the FOMC “may have to move quickly,” but he added, “We’re not seeing that.”
In their September Summary of Economic Projections, FOMC participants revised their estimate of the “longer run” “neutral” rate to 2.9%, and projected the funds rate will reach that level by the end of 2026. But since then, market expectations for rate cuts have moderated.
What’s more, Fed officials differ on where exactly “neutral” is. For example, Dallas Federal Reserve Bank President Lorie Logan said Wednesday she “see(s) substantial signs that the neutral rate has increased in recent years, and some hints that it could be very close to where the fed funds rate is now.”
Other officials think the funds rate remains well above neutral. Across the policy spectrum, uncertainty about the “real” component of the neutral rate is causing ambivalence and caution among officials as they think about “appropriate monetary policy” might be in coming months.
Thus, St. Louis Fed Preisdent Alberto Muslaem said Wednesday the FOMC can afford to move “judiciously and patiently.”
“I think policy is well positioned … on a path toward neutral,” said Muslaem, a 2025 voter. “The strength of the economy is likely to provide space for a gradual easing of policy with little urgency to try to understand and find where the neutral rate is.”
The fact that monetary policy works “with long and variable lags,” as Nobel Prize-winning economist Milton Friedman famously said, also makes it “difficult” to determine the appropriate policy stance,” Powell said.
“That calls for us moving carefully,” he reiterated. “As we get near a plausible range of neutral levels … maybe we slow the pace of what we’re doing. just to increase the chances we get this right,” he went on, adding that the FOMC wants to steer a “middle course” bet ween cutting rates too slowly or too quickly in order to “get it just right.”
Moving more slowly is “the right thing to do,” Powell added.
Asked why the FOMC should cut rates at all if it’s in such “a good place,” he responded that the Committee must remain “mindful of the risk that we go too far too fast but also the risk that we don’t go far enough.’
For now, he said, “We’re right where we ought to be in. The economy is in a good place, and policy is in a good place. We can be careful about that (cutting rates) and that’s what we’re planning to do.”
Powell steered clear of the political implications of Donald Trump’s reelection for monetary policy. He was peppered with questions about potential Trump tariff increases and tax cuts, but was reluctant to answer specifically,
“I don’t want to get into political issues,” he said with a hint of mirth. “I want to stay as far away from that as I possibly can.”
Besides, he said, “it’s too soon” to know what the shape or impact of such policies will be. So the FOMC “will be very careful about changing (monetary) policy until we have lot more certainty” about changes in fiscal and other Republican policies.
Last Thursday, he asserted that he would not resign if asked to do so by Trump and added that the president has no legal authority to force him to step down as Fed chairman. In his latest remarks, Powell simply declared his intention to serve out his current four-year term.
Earlier Thursday, Fed Governor Adriana Kugler took a dualistic approach to monetary policy going forward. The Fed must focus not just on risks to “price stability,” but also to the “maximum employment” side of its dual mandate.
While the FOMC might need to continue cutting rates, it might also need to “pause,” depending on how inflation and employment data unfold, she said.
“The United States has seen considerable disinflation while experiencing a cooling but still resilient labor market,” Kugler said. “While wage moderation and anchored inflation expectations may allow us to continue making progress on inflation, stubborn housing inflation and high inflation in certain goods and services categories may stall progress in reaching our target.”
“At the same time, labor markets have rebalanced, given greater labor supply from immigration and prime-age workers and lower demand from restrictive monetary policy,” she continued. “Thus, although the labor market experienced an extended period of low unemployment and job creation these past several years and strong real wage growth, the labor market has cooled.”
Kugler said “this combination of a continued but slowing trend in disinflation and cooling labor markets means that we need to continue paying attention to both sides of our mandate.”
“If any risks arise that stall progress or re-accelerate inflation, it would be appropriate to pause our policy rate cuts,” she went on. “But if the labor market slows down suddenly, it would be appropriate to continue to gradually reduce the policy rate.”
By Max Sato (MaceNews) – Japan’s gross domestic product for the July-September quarter is forecast to post a sharp slowdown, up just 0.2% on quarter,
–ISM Services Index at 56.0 Vs. 54.9 in September, Well Above Median Forecast 53.5 –ISM’s Miller: Index Likely to Slip Back to 53 or 54
–ISM Manufacturing Index at 46.5 vs. 47.2 in September, Below Median Forecast of 47.6 –ISM’s Fiore: ISM Index Likely to Pick Up Above Neutral Line
By Max Sato (MaceNews) – Japan’s government maintained its overall assessment that the economy’s “modest recovery” is set to continue after the ruling coalition lost
–BoC Repeats: Will Take Policy Decisions One Meeting at a Time –Governor Macklem: We Are Now Equally Concerned About Inflation Coming in Higher or Lower
By Steven K. Beckner (MaceNews) – After getting off to an aggressive, though belated, start on monetary easing, Federal Reserve officials seem inclined to take
–Largest Jump in Global Equity Allocation Since June 2020 By Vicki Schmelzer NEW YORK (MaceNews) – Global investors became more bullish toward equities in October,
–ISM Services Index at 54.9 Vs. 51.5 in August, Well Above Median Forecast 51.5 –ISM’s Miller: Slowe Employment Follows Some Active Hiring in Summer –Miller:
Contact Mace News President
Tony Mace tony@macenews.com
to find a customer- and markets-oriented brand of news coverage with a level of individualized service unique to the industry. A market participant told us he believes he has his own White House correspondent as Mace News provides breaking news and/or audio feeds, stories, savvy analysis, photos and headlines delivered how you want them. And more. And this is important because you won’t get it anywhere else. That’s MICRONEWS. We know how important to you are the short advisories on what’s coming up, whether briefings, statements, unexpected changes in schedules and calendars and anything else that piques our interest.
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Tony Mace was the top editorial executive for Market News International for two decades.
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