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FRONT PAGE

Fed Officials Continue Cautious Monetary Policy Mood in Wake of December Data

By Steven K. Beckner

(MaceNews) – Federal Reserve officials reaffirmed their sense of caution about the future course of monetary policy in wake of a surprisingly strong December employment report, which was widely interpreted as greatly diminishing hopes for interest rate cuts this year.

Officials were already speaking hesitantly about resuming monetary easing, variously calling for “patient,” “gradual” and “cautious” approaches toward further cuts in the federal funds rate, but

such feelings seem to have been augmented since last Friday, when the Labor Department reported stronger than expected job and wage gains last month, as well as a plunge in the unemployment rate.

New York City Federal Reserve Bank President John Williams was vague about where the  Fed’s policymaking Federal Open Market Committee will be taking rates Wednesday, but hinted there is no hurry to change the funds rate, given great uncertainty about the outlook and given that getting inflation down to the Fed’s 2% target “will take time.”

Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari suggested the Fed may have to keep the short-term interest rates it controls higher to the extent that better productivity growth has driven up the “neutral” rate.

Kansas City Federal Reserve Bank President Jeff Schmid said the funds rate may already be at neutral.

On the other hand, Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee expressed great optimism about the inflation outlook, suggesting he may be more prone to rate cuts than others.

Many observers were looking for further cooling of the labor market, along with moderation of inflation, in the hope that the FOMC might see fit to continue cutting the funds rate after 100 basis pints of easing in 2024.

But such hopes were dashed when the Bureau of Labor Statistics announced that non-farm payrolls grew by 256,000 new jobs in December, far more than expected and up from 212,000 in November. It also reported that the unemployment rate fell a tenth to 4.1%. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% or 3.9% from a year earlier – nearly twice the Fed’s 2% inflation target.

At the Dec. 18 meeting, when the FOMC cut the funds rate for a third time to a target range of 4.25% to 4.50%, participants projected two additional 25 basis point reductions this year — half as many as anticipated in their September Summary of Economic Projections.

But in wake of the December employment report, many Fed watchers are now forecasting only one 25 basis point cut and not until later in the year. Some even began speculating about a possible policy reversal that could bring rate hikes. The report reinforced an uptrend in bond yields.

Wall Street turned more cheerful Wednesday morning after the Labor Department released mixed inflation data. Its consumer price index rose 0.4% in December and 2.9% from a year ago – up from 2.7% in November. The core CPI moderated a bit from to 3.2% year-over-year after four straight 3.3% increases, after climbing 0.2% last month. Previously, the producer price index was reported up a less-than-expected 0.2% last month, but a higher 3.3% from a year earlier. And it was noted by some that core PCE categories like domestic and international airline fares were up much more than expected.

In its Dec. 18 policy statement, the FOMC signaled that further cuts in the funds rate are likely to be more limited, and Chair Jerome Powell reinforced the impression by saying the FOMC would be proceeding “slowly” and “cautiously” as they seek to balance their goals of “maximum employment” and returning to “price stability.”

Minutes of the mid-December meeting, released Wednesday, confirmed that most FOMC participants were predisposed to pause rate cuts. There was division, but “a substantial majority of participants observed that, at the current juncture, with its policy stance still meaningfully restrictive, the Committee was well positioned to take time to assess the evolving outlook for economic activity and inflation, including the economy’s responses to the Committee’s earlier policy actions.”

Ahead of the FOMC’s next meeting of January 28-29, officials have continued to sound hesitant about resuming monetary easing.

On Wednesday, Williams trod carefully in remarks at a CBIA Economic Summit and Outlook conference.

“The economy is in a very good place and has returned to balance, as have the risks to the two sides of our mandate,” the FOMC vice chairman said. “Because that balance has now been achieved, our job is to ensure the risks remain in balance.”

Williams spoke with some trepidation about inflation. “While I expect that disinflation will progress, it will take time, and the process may well be choppy.”

He said monetary policy is “well positioned to keep the risks to our goals in balance,” but said “the path for monetary policy will depend on the data,”

Although the economy is “in a good place,” Williams said the economic outlook is “highly uncertain, especially around potential fiscal, trade, immigration, and regulatory policies.”

Kashkari, a 2025 FOMC voter, called the economy “resilient” despite a “tight” monetary policy and indicated that rates may have to stay relatively high so long as faster productivity growth is driving up the “neutral” rate.

FOMC participants increased their estimate of the “longer run” or “neutral” funds rate, which includes the Fed’s 2% inflation target plus a hypothetical “real” rate, by some six tenths to 3.0% in December.

At the Minneapolis Fed’s 2025 Regional Economic Conditions Conference, Kashkari said, “productivity growth now seems higher,” although he said he’s “not sure that’s going to be continued.” He said this drives up demand for capital, which tends to push up real interest rates and in turn the “neutral” funds rate.

“I feel like we are takers, we are recipients, of this broader macroeconomic environment that we’re in, that we’re having to navigate around,” he said. “So, if this neutral rate, which we debate a lot, if the neutral rate is low we’ll move monetary policy up and down around that neutral rate to achieve our dual mandate goals.”

“If the neutral rate is higher because we’re in a higher productivity environment then we’ll move monetary policy around that higher neutral rate,” Kashkari continued. “But we don’t believe that we can set that neutral rate. We feel that we’re takers of that neutral rate, and we have to try to figure out what that neutral rate is, which is imperfect at best.”

Asked if the FOMC’s rate decisions are also influenced by federal budget deficits and their effect on bond yields, Kashkari replied, “For sure, for sure, for sure.”

Coincidentally, the Cleveland Fed released research Wednesday showing that “US productivity may be on a higher growth trajectory than previous estimates,”

Goolsbee, reacting to the CPI report, suggested that the inflation picture may be even better than the numbers indicate because higher first quarter 2024 price increases will be “falling out” in calculations of year-over-year inflation gauges in coming months.

“I still see continued progress,” he asserted in a Midwest Economic Forecast Forum webinar.

Goolsbee, who will also be voting on the FOMC this year, added, “It’s important to take the long view .… The trend continues to be improvement in inflation.”

Usually thought of as one of the more “dovish” Fed district bank presidents, he said “the key thing the Fed is looking for are signs the economy is overheating or stabilizing at a full employment level,” but went on to reiterate his previous belief that the economy is on a “golden path” of disinflation without recession, i.e. a “soft landing.”

Despite fears that tight labor markets would drive up wages and in turn prices, Goolsbee observed that “inflation did come down even though wage growth was high.”

As for whether policies of the incoming Trump administration will boost inflation, he said, “if Congress and the President begin drafting policies that are going to raise prices we’ll have to think about it.” But he said the Fed can’t prejudge the impact of policy changes.

A past skeptic of the Fed’s 2% inflation target, he declared, “We will get it to 2%, because that’s a promise we made.” And he said that target helped keep inflation expectations low even when it was approaching 10%.

While generally upbeat about the economy, Goolsbee noted that credit delinquencies have reached a “high” level, and “that area of the house is of some concern to me.”

Goolsbee had little to say about interest rates, but in contrast to other officials, he said, “I still think neutral is below where we are now .…”

Responding to a question about mortgage rates, he said, “de facto I do think rates are going to be higher than before…” because “we’ve been in a restrictive funds rate environment.”

He said “higher rates are tough for housing,” and said “going back to a more normal rate environment” will help the housing market, but he also pointed to tight supply conditions in the housing market.

Schmid, another 2025 FOMC voter, reiterated his belief that the funds rate is already near where it needs to be over the longer run on Tuesday.

“With inflation close to target and growth showing continued momentum, I believe we are

near the point where the economy needs neither restriction nor support and that policy should be

neutral,” he said, adding that “there are many good reasons to expect that interest rates might settle at a higher neutral rate than we saw before the pandemic.”

Schmid also warned that “interest rates could also settle higher on account of the continued

deterioration of the U.S. fiscal position and an abundance of Treasury borrowing that needs to be financed.”

So, “interest rates might be very close to their longer-run level now,” he said.

“Regardless, I am in favor of adjusting policy gradually going forward and only in response to a sustained change in the tone of the data,” Schmid went on. ”The strength of the economy allows us to be patient.”

Schmid also repeated his advocacy of continued balance sheet shrinkage to “reduce the Fed’s footprint in financial markets.”

Noting that the Fed has been shrinking its balance sheet for over two years, he said, “I would like to see even further declines this year.”

“Also, I would prefer that we move towards holding only Treasuries in our portfolio in line with previous communications from the FOMC,” Schmid said, adding that the Fed should “move out

of mortgage-backed securities” and should avoid “using our balance sheet to intervene in any other asset classes.”

Even before the December job and inflation data, a mood of caution had grown among Fed officials. Late last week, yet another 2025 voter, St. Louis Fed President Alberto Musalem said further rate cuts would “have to be gradual – and more gradual than I thought in September.”

UPDATE: Fed Officials Take Cautious Approach to Further Rate Cuts As Late Jan FOMC Nears

– Harker Still Sees Rates Heading Lower; But Now ‘Appropriate To Take A Pause’

– Collins Calls for ‘Patient Approach to Policy’; Cuts Could Go Faster or Slower

– Schmid: Funds Rate May Already Be ‘Neutral;’ Favors Further Balance Sheet Shrinkage

– Bowman Urges ‘Caution;’ Monetary Policy Not As Restrictive As Some Think 

By Steven K. Beckner

(MaceNews) – Federal Reserve officials continued to step lightly in talking about the outlook for the U.S. economy and monetary policy Thursday, leaving uncertain the size and timing of additional short-term interest rate reductions.

Collectively, Fed policymakers seem to be showing little inclination to cut interest rates again when their Federal Open Market Committee convenes later this month — not surprisingly, given the ostensible pause signals sent by the FOMC and Chairman Jerome Powell last month. 

At the same time, though, most Fed officials do seem to lean strongly toward a resumption of monetary easing at some point, perhaps in March.

Philadelphia Federal Reserve Bank President Patrick Harker said he sees the Fed remaining on “a downward policy rate path,” but “the exact speed” of rate-cutting will depend on the data. For now, he said “it’s appropriate to take a pause,” though probably not “a long pause.”

Boston Fed President Susan Collins, who will be an FOMC voter this year, callled for “a patient approach to policy” and allowed for either quicker or slower rate cuts.

Kansas City Fed President Jeff Schmid, another 2025 voter, sounded less inclined than others to back further rate cuts, based on his belief that the current federal funds rate setting may already be close to “neutral,” and that is where he thinks monetary policy should be in the current economy.

He described himself as favoring a “gradual” and “patient” strategy.

Fed Governor Michelle Bowman, who has also tended to be be on the “hawkish” end of the policy spectrum, likewise urged the Fed to be “cautious” about further rate cuts. After a full percentage point of funds rate reductions, she maintained that monetary policy “may not be as restrictive as others may see it.”

On Dec. 18, the Fed’s policy-making Federal Open Market Committee completed 100 basis points of easing by cutting key federal funds rate by 25 basis points to a target range of 4.25% to 4.5%.  — a median 4.4%.

The 19 FOMC participants halved their projections for rate cuts in the new year from four to two. In their revised, quarterly Summary of Economic Projections, they project the funds rate will end 2025 at a median 3.9% (a target range of 3.75-4.0%) — 50 basis points higher than in the September SEP.

In its policy statement, the FOMC signaled that further cuts in the funds rate are likely to be more limited, and Chairman Jerome Powell reinforced the impression by saying the FOMC would be proceeding “slowly” and “cautiously” as they seek to balance their goals of “maximum employment” and returning to “price stability.”

Minutes of the mid-December meeting, released Wednesday, confirmed that most FOMC participants were predisposed to pause rate cuts.

“Participants indicated that the Committee was at or near the point at which it would be appropriate to slow the pace of policy easing,” the minutes disclose, adding that “if the data came in about as expected, with inflation continuing to move down sustainably to 2% and the economy remaining near maximum employment, it would be appropriate to continue to move gradually toward a more neutral stance of policy over time.”

The minutes say “some” officials thought “the policy rate was now significantly closer to its neutral value” after 100 basis points of easing, and say “many participants suggested that a variety of factors underlined the need for a careful approach to monetary policy decisions over coming quarters.”

“A substantial majority of participants observed that, at the current juncture, with its policy stance still meaningfully restrictive, the Committee was well positioned to take time to assess the evolving outlook for economic activity and inflation, including the economy’s responses to the Committee’s earlier policy actions,” the minutes add.

The FOMC’s first meeting of 2025 will be January 28-29.

Harker, who will retire at mid-year, has been among the more dovish officials of late, but on Thursday he was speaking more tentatively, saying he favors further rate reductions, but “remain(s) cautious of possible upside influences on policy.”

“I still see us on a downward policy rate path,” he told the National Association of Corporate Directors in Princeton, New Jersey. “Looking at everything before me now, I am not about to walk off this path or turn around.”

“But the exact speed I continue to go along this path will be fully dependent upon the incoming data,” he continued in prepared remarks. “Keep in mind, a projection is, well, only a projection. It’s not a promise.”

“So, at this moment, I’m still just putting one foot in front of the other,” Harker added.

Responding to questions, Harker said, “it’s appropriate to take a pause right now and see how things shake out … not a long pause necessarily.”

“We can stay where we are for a little bit – probably not for long, but we’ll have to see… we have to let the data play out to see what happens,” he added.

Harker echoed the uncertainty, if not unsettledness, expressed by other Fed officials, particularly with regard to employment. “(T)he overall underpinnings of our economy remain strong. But we remain in very unsettled times and there remain,”

“I am going to keep a close watch on the data to glean whatever nuances I can….,” Harker said. “(I)n the overall we are still creating jobs, maybe just not at the pace of the past couple of years…..”

Among the uncertainties facing the FOMC, Harker said, is the level of the “neutral” funds rate, composed of the 2% inflation target plus an imagined “real” rate or “r*.”

But he was agnostic. Once thought to be 50 basis points or even lower, r* (and in turn the nominal neutral rate)

R* was once thought to be 50 or even less, but “some are now arguing that it may be higher,” he noted, but “we don’t’ know that for sure.”

“Given all that, we just have to be cautious,” Harker went on. The FOMC has to “act now on what we know, not guess on what r* is going to be…It’s unknowable…We can’t estimate it a priori.”

An added complication is that long-term rates in the bond market have been climbing despite Fed rate cuts. Harker said “we have to be humble about what we can and cannot do.. we can’t control that end of the curve … . When you move the short end, you expect the long end to respond, but not if other factors are working in opposition.”

Meanwhile, Collins also spoke cautiously and contingently in remarks to the NAIOP in Boston.

She defended her vote for last September’s 50 basis point rate cut as “fully appropriate – given the significant, if bumpy, progress on inflation.”

“The adjustment recognized that there was no need for further cooling of the no-longer-overheated labor market; that a given nominal policy rate would become increasingly restrictive as inflation came down; and that as the pace of growth moderates, the economy can be more vulnerable to adverse shocks.”

Collins, who will be voting this year, described the December rate cut decision was “a closer call, but said it “provided some additional insurance to preserve healthy labor market conditions while maintaining a restrictive policy stance that is still needed to sustainably restore price stability.”

Going forward, she said her policy outlook is “broadly in line with the median forecast” in the S.E.P. – that is to say two 25 basis point cuts in 2025.

“In particular, I expect inflation in 2025 to run somewhat higher than I previously thought, with the risks likely having shifted to the upside,” she explained. “Inflation, while notably closer to the 2% target, has proved “stickier” than anticipated.”

But Collins said “it is too early to tell how future policy changes by the new administration and Congress might influence the trajectories of inflation and economic activity.”

And she added that “it will take some time for the effects of our monetary policy actions to filter through to the economy.”

What’s more, while calling the labor market “healthy,” Collins said she intends to “watch for possible fragilities, remaining attentive to both sides of our dual mandate, and recognizing risks to both inflation and employment.”

Collins said “this context calls for a patient approach to policy – taking the time to fully assess available information and not over-reacting to individual data readings, as we calibrate policy meeting by meeting.”

She said “this likely implies a more gradual approach to policy normalization.”

Like others, Collins allowed for an acceleration or deceleration of monetary easing depending on the circumstances. “Policy is well positioned to adjust as required to evolving conditions – holding at the current level for longer if there is little further progress on inflation, or easing sooner if the need arises.”

In other comments, Harkin vowed the Fed “will not issue a central bank digital currency unless Congress directs us to do so … . We’re not anywhere close (to launching CBDC).”

Later Thursday, Schmid took a more hawkish position than others in remarks to the Economic Club of Kansas City, strongly suggesting that he would hesitate to cut rates much further, if at all.

“With inflation close to target and growth showing continued momentum, I believe we are near the point where the economy needs neither restriction nor support and that policy should be neutral,” he said. “This partly reflects the easing the Fed has already done, having lowered the policy rate by a full percentage point since September.”

Addressing the question of whether the current funds rate target range of 4.25-4.50% is “restrictive” or “neutral,” he reiterated an argument he made in November — that “there are many good reasons to expect that interest rates might settle at a higher neutral rate than we saw before the pandemic.”

Besides, Schmid said federal fiscal policy is elevating the entire rate structure. “More concerning, interest rates could also settle higher on account of the continued deterioration of the U.S. fiscal position and an abundance of Treasury borrowing that needs to be financed.”

“My read is that interest rates might be very close to their longer-run level now,” he continued. “Regardless, I am in favor of adjusting policy gradually going forward and only in response to a sustained change in the tone of the data.”

“The strength of the economy allows us to be patient,” Schmid added.

In response to a question about getting inflation down to 2% from 2 ½%, Schmid said that may not be achieved until 2026.

Although inflation has been brought down considerably from a peak above 9%, he said “here’s still work to be done,” but he said “it almost seems more difficult” to get it all the way to 2%.

Citing a “friction” between the Fed’s dual mandate goals of maximum employment and price stability, Schmid said the Fed wants to get inflation down to 2%, but in the process “not to unnecessarily create volatility in the economy …. .You do try not to break things as we striye to get the inflation factor down to two.”

He prefaced those comments by observing that, “we are a lot closer than we were two-and-a-half years ago when inflation was at a 40-year high, and I am fairly optimistic that inflation will continue to move in the right direction.”

“As the labor market has loosened, inflation has fallen,” he said, adding that inflation expectations “have remained anchored at a level consistent with 2 percent inflation.”

Schmid emphasized that, although inflation has come down “following a rapid tightening of monetary policy, it is essential that the Fed remain vigilant and maintain this hard-fought credibility.”

Looking at the other side of the Fed mandate, Schmid said he is “optimistic about employment and the strength of the economy. Though the job market has loosened, it remains healthy …. . The unemployment rate has inched up but remains low.”

In other comments, Schmid said one of his new year resolutions is to “reduce the Fed’s footprint in financial markets.”

In pursuit of that resolution, he advocated continued shrinkage of the Fed balance sheet at a time when most of the speculation has been about when the Fed will desist from doing so.

“For over two years the Fed has been shrinking its balance sheet,” he noted. “Substantial progress has been made, with the size of the Fed’s asset holdings declining by about $2 trillion from its peak. However, I would like to see even further declines this year.”

Also, I would prefer that we move towards holding only treasuries in our portfolio in line with previous communications from the FOMC.

We should minimize our impact on relative asset prices. Currently, this means moving out of mortgage-backed securities. Even more emphatically, I would strongly oppose using our balance sheet to intervene in any other asset classes.

During the Q&A session, Schmid noted that “some would argue that we should discontinue runoff,” but he said “that would not be a favorable thing in my opinion..”

Bowman, who voted with the FOMC majority in favor of the Dec. 18 rate cut after dissenting against the September cut, took a similar approach to the funds rate.

“Looking ahead, we should be cautious in considering changes to the policy rate as we move toward a more neutral setting,” she told the California Bankers Association. “Future actions should be based on a careful assessment of ongoing and sustained progress in achieving our goals, and we must be clear in our communication about how further changes are intended to affect economic conditions.”

Bowman said she continues to be “concerned that the current stance of policy may not be as restrictive as others may see it. Given the ongoing strength in the economy, it seems unlikely that the overall level of interest rates and borrowing costs are providing meaningful restraint.”

“With equity prices more than 20 percent higher than a year ago, easier financial conditions may be contributing to the lack of further progress on slowing inflation,” she continued. “In fact, concerns about inflation risks seem to partly explain the recent notable increase in the 10-year Treasury yield back to values last seen in the spring of 2024.”

“In light of these considerations, I continue to prefer a cautious and gradual approach to adjusting policy,” she added.

Although some officials have speculated that Trump tariff and other policies could adversely affect the economy, Bowman warned, “We should also refrain from prejudging the incoming administration’s future policies. Instead, we should wait for more clarity and then seek to understand the effects on economic activity, the labor market, and inflation.”

Thursday’s flood of Fedspeak continued was largely consistent with previous new year commentary.

On Wednesday, Gov. Christopher Waller said he “will support continuing to cut our policy rate in 2025,” assuming the economy performs as he expects, with the exact number of rate cuts depending on incoming data.

His expectation, as he explained, is for continued “solid” economic growth; employment “near” the Fed’s “maximum-employment objective,” and disinflation resuming.

Regarding the latter, Waller said he “believe(s) that inflation will continue to make progress toward our 2% goal over the medium term and that further reductions will be appropriate.” He cited a number of factors that “should result in a significant step-down in the 12-month inflation numbers through March.”

Waller, speaking to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development in Paris, was vague about how many additional rate cuts he thinks will be appropriate, but suggested he is open to lowering the funds rate more than the 50 basis points projected in December.

“The pace of those cuts will depend on how much progress we make on inflation, while keeping the labor market from weakening,” he said. “Based on the most recent Summary of Economic Projections, the median of policymakers’ expected appropriate policy rate this year implies two 25 basis point cuts.”

“But the range of views is quite large, from no cuts to as many as five cuts for different FOMC participants,” he continued. “As always, the extent of further easing will depend on what the data tell us about progress toward 2% inflation, but my bottom-line message is that I believe more cuts will be appropriate.”

Waller downplayed potential inflationary implications of the higher tariffs which the incoming Trump administration might impose. “If, as I expect, tariffs do not have a significant or persistent effect on inflation, they are unlikely to affect my view of appropriate monetary policy.”

Addressing Western central banks at large, Waller advised “sticking to our mandates and resisting the temptation to go beyond them ….” because seeing risks clearly is “hard,” he added, “We need to remain focused.”

“We also need to be nimble in responding to unfamiliar risks and be prepared to use our monetary policy tools in new ways to prepare for unprecedented challenges that may present themselves,” he went on, “When conditions are uncertain, as they often are, we must move deliberately but also be ready to act quickly and decisively when the situation demands it…”

Waller stressed the need for central banks to retain their “credibility,” saying “this is most effectively maintained when monetary policy decisions are made according to our mandates.”

Earlier in the week, Fed Governor Lisa Cook said the Fed “can afford to proceed more cautiously with further cuts,” given lower inflation and still “solid” (though cooler) labor markets.

-0-

ISM: US Services Sector Expands for 6th Straight Month in December on Robust Business Activity, with Boost from Seasonality, Preparation for Possible Trump Tariffs

–ISM Services Index at 54.1 in December Vs. 52.1 in November, Above Median Forecast 53.2
–ISM’s Miller: Fed Likely to Pause in Rate Cuts in Face of 2nd Straight Quarterly Growth in Services Sector, Creeping Costs
–Miller: Firms Concerned About Expected Drag from Trump Tariffs on Canadian Product Supply

By Max Sato

(MaceNews) – The U.S. services sector expanded for a sixth straight month in December, led by robust business activity ahead of the New Year and possible stiff tariffs on imports from key suppliers Canada and Mexico but the overall purchasing managers index was also boosted by seasonal adjustments and firms are concerned about higher costs, data from the Institute for Supply Management showed Tuesday.

The ISM index, which shows the directional change of economic activity, rose 2.0 percentage points to 54.1, above its 12-month moving average of 52.5, after losing 3.9 points to a three-month low of 52.1 in November from a 27-month high of 56.0 in October. It was also much higher than the consensus forecast of 53.2.

“Many industries noted that end-of-year and seasonal factors were helping drive business activity or impact inventory management,” Steve Miller, chair of the ISM Services Business Survey Committee, said in a statement. “Some of the increased business activity seems to have been driven by preparation for demand in the new year, or risk management for impacts from ports strikes and potential tariffs.”

Miller told reporters that second consecutive average quarterly gain in the overall index “gives me confidence that we are back on sound footing in the services sector.” The PMI in the October-December quarter rose 1.5 points to 54.1 after rising 1.9 points to 52.6 in July-September and falling 1.8 points to 50.7 in April-June.

However, as seen in the ISM manufacturing survey, the months of December and January reflect statistical adjustments made to correct month-to-month surges or plunges caused by seasonal factors, such as much shorter operation days during the yearend holiday season, re-stocking ahead of the Lunar New Year (Jan. 29 this year) and disruptions in winter weather for those two months.

The ISM services PMI posted declines from November to December every year in the last 10 years. When this pattern is corrected in the seasonally adjusted data series, the index tends to rise toward yearend. The change in new orders was 50-50 and employment was down in seven out of 10 in the same timeframe. The prices paid index rose from November to December, in seven out of the last 10 years, which means the key measure on costs was also boosted by seasonality.

Miller said he is not so concerned about a rise in inventories as inventory sentiment was down in December while many firms in the latest survey expressed concerns over rising costs and the expected negative impact that higher tariffs would have on their costs, particularly arising from purchases of farm products from Canada.

President-elect Donald Trump has threated to impose a 25% tariff on all goods from Mexico and Canada, and an additional 10% tariff on imports from China, all part of his drive to crack down on illegal drugs and immigration.

“Suppliers are being proactive in passing forward increases in pricing year over year in anticipation of tariff impacts,” Miller said, based on comments from supply managers. There is no data to confirm the increase in costs is sustained as a trend but it is “concerning,” he added.

After a series of interest rate cuts from the Federal Reserve, Miller said, “It will probably make sense to do a pause and see what happens in Q1” given that the ISM services PMI showed the second quarterly rise and the prices paid index crept up in December.

At its latest meeting on Dec. 17-18, the Federal Open Market Committee decided in an 11 to 1 majority vote to lower the target range for the federal funds rate by 25 basis points (0.25 percentage point) to a range of 4.25% to 4.50%, as expected.   The summary of economic projections shows that the median FOMC forecast for the fed funds target rate is a midpoint of 3.9% in 2025, up from 3.4% in the prior forecast. This implies two 25-basis point rate cuts for 2025, fewer than previously expected.

Among comments from the ISM survey, a company in the professional, scientific and technical services category said, “Inflation levels seem to be increasing, thus dimming hopes of interest rate cuts.”

The construction industry, which is sensitive to borrowing costs, also sees dark clouds over the horizon. “New residential construction remains hampered by interest rates and affordability issues,” a construction firm manager told the ISM.

“As projects can take two-plus years, budgeting is getting difficult, similar to 2021 and 2022, when supply chain disruptions caused chaos in pricing.”

“Preparations are underway to diversify supply in the anticipation for tariffs and the effect it will have on our business,” a firm from the accommodation and food services industry said. Well before the latest tariff threat came from Trump, hospitalities and construction firms had been shifting their purchases from China to Thailand, Vietnam and Mexico for several years from technical viewpoints.

Of the four sub-indexes that directly factor into the services PMI, the business activity/production index registered a six-month high of 58.2 in December, 4.5 points higher than the 53.7 recorded in November, finishing the year with its third-highest reading for 2024. The new orders index recorded a reading of 54.2, up 0.5 point from November’s figure of 53.7. Both indicate a sixth consecutive month of expansion.

The employment index remained in expansion territory for the fifth time in six months; the reading of 51.4 is a 0.1-point decrease compared to the 51.5 recorded in November.

The supplier deliveries index – the only ISM index that is inversed – stood at 52.5, 3.0 points higher than 49.5 in November. The index returned to expansion territory — indicating slower supplier delivery performance — to split the year, with six months each in expansion and contraction.

Among other subindexes, the prices index was at 64.4 in December, a 6.2-point increase from November’s reading of 58.2, hitting the highest since 65.1 in February 2023. The surge in costs was seen in real estate, rental and leasing, finance and insurance, and agriculture, forestry, fishing and hunting. The index was well above its 12-month moving average stood at 58.7, which was up from 58.0 in the previous three months.

The inventories index stayed in contraction territory in December for the second month after three months in expansion, registering 49.4, an increase of 3.5 points from November’s figure of 45.9. By contrast, the inventory sentiment index fell 1.2 points to 53.4 from 54.6, although it was above 50 for the 20th consecutive month.

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