Fed faces fresh pressure to raise interest rates as inflation hits 30-year high
The Federal Reserve says inflation is ‘not transitory’ is a ‘farce’: Economist
Johnson Smick International chairman and CEO David Smick provides insight into whether inflation is transitory.
The Federal Reserve for months has taken a patient stance on hotter-than-expected inflation, reiterating frequently that a months-long surge in consumer prices is transitory and that raising interest rates too soon risks the U.S. from achieving full jobs recovery.
But experts are calling that philosophy into question, after the government reported on Wednesday morning that prices for U.S. consumers surged 6.2% in October compared with a year earlier. So-called core prices, which exclude the more volatile measurements of energy and food, rose 4.6% over the past year. Both are the largest increases in 30 years.
"It is hard to see how the Fed will be able to stay on the sidelines much longer," said Matthew Sherwood, global economist at the Economist Intelligence Unit.
Combined with new evidence that the labor market is bouncing back from a summer slump – the unemployment rate fell to a new pandemic low of 4.8% in October as the economy added 531,000 jobs – the U.S. central bank may have no choice but to raise interest rates as soon as next summer.
FED TO TAPER BOND PURCHASES BY $15B A MONTH AS IT EXITS PANDEMIC-ERA POLICY
Traders are now pricing in at least two rate hikes in 2022, and about a 46% chance of a third increase, according to the CME’s FedWatch tool.
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