Thursday, 28 Mar 2024

Fed likely to keep interest rates on hold as coronavirus worries grow

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The U.S. Federal Reserve will end its latest policy meeting on Wednesday with interest rates likely on hold, adjustments to its balance sheet under discussion, and China’s widening coronavirus outbreak posing an unexpected risk to the global economy.

A growing list of countries and companies are curbing travel to and from China, evacuating personnel, and scaling back operations in response to the health scare in the world’s second-largest economy.

As a result, some are predicting Chinese economic growth could dip below 5% early this year, which would be a multi-decade low and send a chill through financial markets.

Based on prior outbreaks like the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS) epidemic in 2002 and 2003, the economic impact could be short-lived if infections slow or a treatment is found.

Investors seemed to be pointing in that hopeful direction. After a sell-off on Monday, U.S. equity markets rose on Tuesday and were largely flat late Wednesday morning.

But a spreading global health scare could also have broader implications for the world and U.S. economies, something Fed Chair Jerome Powell is likely to be asked about in his news conference following the end of the policy meeting.

Since the U.S. central bank cut rates in October, its third and final reduction in borrowing costs in 2019, policymakers have agreed to keep their target policy rate in the current range of 1.50% and 1.75% until there is some significant change in the economic outlook.

U.S. data since the Fed’s last policy meeting in December have done little to shift expectations for continued economic growth this year of around 2% and steady, low unemployment.

U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday also repeated his call for even lower rates. The Republican president lambasted the Fed and Powell in 2018 and 2019 for maintaining a monetary policy that he regarded as too tight.

While investors have increased bets the Fed would cut rates again at some point this year, analysts still were near unanimous that any such decision is months down the road.

Ninety-five of 108 economists polled by Reuters recently said they expected the Fed to leave rates on hold at this week’s meeting, and JP Morgan analyst Michael Feroli said it would likely be “one of the least eventful meetings in recent years.”

The Fed is due to release its policy statement at 2 p.m. EST (1900 GMT). Powell’s news conference is scheduled to start half an hour later.

LONG-TERM FIX

The current solid consensus over rates, however, doesn’t mean the agenda is empty.

The Fed is expected to soon decide how much longer it will continue its current practice of buying $60 billion a month in U.S. Treasury bills, how to scale that program back, and what will replace it as a long-term fix for its management of short-term bank funding markets.

Pumping that extra liquidity into the banking system each month has allowed the Fed to keep short-term interest rates within the target range, addressing an issue that arose last fall when a shortage of bank reserves led that rate to spike.

But it is considered less than an ideal fix. It means the Fed each month is adding to its roughly $4 trillion in assets. Some policymakers would prefer the central bank have a smaller balance sheet if possible.

It has also created the impression that the Fed is engaging in a scaled-down form of the “quantitative easing” it used to prop up the economy in response to the 2007-2009 recession.

Fed officials argue against that comparison, but they face the issue of how to scale the monthly purchases back without risking fallout in asset markets where the extra central bank liquidity is considered a “tailwind” that helps lift prices.

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“The question is when, not if,” the balance sheet growth stops, Cornerstone Macro analyst Roberto Perli wrote. “We expect Powell to convey this message but to stay vague on timing, for now.”

As they discuss how to end this current round of asset purchases, Fed officials are also debating what could take its place. Some policymakers support a permanent offering of short-term “repo” loans that banks could tap as needed, a system they say would allow reserve levels to be set by banks.

In a related adjustment, the Fed may also raise by perhaps five basis points the interest rate it pays banks on excess reserves as a way to keep the federal funds rate closer to the middle of the current policy target rate.

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