U.S. Fed chair plays Scrooge as markets tumble following latest rate hike: Don Pittis - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 05:12 PM | Calgary | -11.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
BusinessAnalysis

U.S. Fed chair plays Scrooge as markets tumble following latest rate hike: Don Pittis

Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell insists the U.S. economy is strong and President Donald Trump's demands that he stop hiking interest rates will have no effect on the central bank's policy.

President Donald Trump's demands will have no effect on 2019 path of rate increases, central bank chief says

Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell's expressive grimace. (Mary F. Calvert/Reuters)

With his long face and expressive grimaces, Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell might have played a powerful Ebenezer Scrooge, the repentant anti-hero of Charles Dickens's A Christmas Carol.

Certainly that is how stock markets seemed to see him yesterday after the U.S. central bankerhikedrates for the fourth time this year.

Powell and his team of advisers did repent somewhat, saying there would likely only be two rate increases in 2019 instead of the anticipated three. But that apparently didn't satisfy the Dow Jones Industrial average.

Markets rise then plunge

Initially, the markets went up after the central bank released its statement revealing that, as expected, it was raising rates again,for a total hike of one full percentage point for the year.

But as Powell responded to reporters' questions in thenews conference that followed, the Dow steadily declined by 700 points. By the end of the day, the index had hit its low for the year.

The decline was described as the worst response to a rate hike since 1994, when the Fed of that time raised rates 2.5 percentage points in a year.

However, it was not obvious exactly what the markets were responding to yesterday. Before the Fed announcement, most analysts said the rate hike was locked in and markets had already taken it into account.

In fact, the two-stage process of a Fed release seemed to confirm that was true. Immediately after the printed document came out at 2 p.m., showing that rates would indeed go up by a quarter point, themarket began to climb.

Some of the analysis before Powell's release had warned there could be consequences if he decided not to raise rates. According to that thinking, pulling back from a rate hike now would show the Fed had real fears for the economy.

But as Powell revealed in his news conference, that was absolutely not the case.

"Our forecast for next year is, I think, in keeping with most other forecasts that we'll still have solid growth next year, declining unemployment and a healthy economy," Powell said.

Recession not in the cards

While economic growth won't be as strong as the bumperyear gone by, with its flood of tax cuts and fiscal spending, the economy in 2019 will be nowhere near recession.

Based onthe expectations of thebankers who sit on the open markets committee that advises Powell, the medianrate of growth in 2019 will be a healthy 2.3 per cent. Unemployment is expected tofall to 3.5 per cent. Inflation will remain around two per cent right on target.

The relationship between the economy and markets is a strange one. Clearly, a strong U.S. economy is essential to business in the long term.

But it is well known that stock markets like low interest rates. In the short term, they may even prefer low rates to a strong economy. Since the 2008 credit crisis, each time the economy sagged and requiredinterest rate cuts, the markets seemed to be the main beneficiary.

Markets don't like it when central bankers take away the punch bowl. (Everett Collection/Shutterstock)

Bonds, too, shot up in value as interest rates fell.

As that process reverses, it is clearthe people who own those stocks and bonds are feeling the pinch. It really is the classic case of the central banker taking away the punch bowl, especially when people like U.S. President Donald Trump have made it clear they would like the party to continue.

Do the right thing

If Powell is Scrooge, then perhaps the U.S. president has been playing the role of Jacob Marley, constantly rattling his chains andwarning that the central banker should change his ways.

In the news conference, reporters asked repeatedly, and in different ways, if Powell would cave to the president's demands to stop raising rates. Each time his answer wasthe same. A firm no.

"Political considerations have played no role whatsoever in our discussions or decisions about monetary policy,"Powell said in one response, never once mentioning Trump's name. "Nothing will deter us from doing what we think is the right thing to do."

That does not mean Powell and his advisers will be inflexible.

The Fed chair noted that Trump's trade war is causing concern, although, so far, it's difficult to tease that out in the financial data. The market declines, which Powelldescribed as "financial tightening" anda"mood of angst," could eventually have an effect on the wider economy.

But, like Trump's outraged tweets telling Powell to desist, they could also be evidence of a painful process wherespeculative growth powered by easy money goes through an essential transition.

Future financial health depends not just on returns from rising asset prices due to low interest rates but on wise investments that create productive industries and well-paying jobs.

With luck, that is the transition we are going through now.

And if not, Powell and his advisers are ready to watch the data as it comes in and adjust the path of interest rates,followingtheirmandate from Congressto try to keep employment and inflation on track in 2019.

Follow Don on Twitter @don_pittis