3 Reasons Why the Fed Can Afford to Pause in June
Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Kohn made the most explicit comment that we have heard from a central bank official to date about pausing in June. He said that the “economy, markets should gradually improve” and “monetary policy appears to be appropriately calibrated for now to promote both rising employment and moderating inflation over the medium term.”
The Federal Reserve needs to pause because inflation is on the rise and they can afford to pause because economic data has been stabilizing.
1. What’s Going on with Producer Prices?
In the month of April, headline producer prices fell short of expectations while core prices rose more than expected. This reversal of patterns is fascinating because the primary driver of higher inflation has been food and energy prices. It isn’t a surprise to see core rise, because prices are being increased everywhere, but I believe that the slower growth in headline prices should be nothing more than a correction within an overall uptrend. The US government has already increased their predictions for food price growth by half of a percentage point and the latest uptick in oil prices will only further increase inflationary pressures.
2. Economic Data Has Been Stabilizing
1. Leading indicators Rose for the Second Month in a Row
2. Housing Starts and Buidling Permits Rebounded in April
3. Manufacturing in the Philadelphia Region is Recovering
4. Service Sector ISM Back in Expansionary Territory
5. Trade Deficit Narrowed in March
3. TED Spread - The spread between what the U.S. government and banks pay to borrow in dollars for three months also dropped to the lowest level in 9 months. This suggests that liquidity problems are easing.
The latest Fed Fund Futures are already pricing in an 86% chance that the Fed will leave interest rates at 2% on June 25th.
By Kathy Lien
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