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Federal Reserve raises interest rate to the highest level in 16 years

cigaretteman

HB King
May 29, 2001
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The Federal Reserve reinforced its fight against high inflation Wednesday by raising its key interest rate by a quarter-point to the highest level in 16 years. But the Fed also signaled that it may now pause the streak of 10 rate hikes that have made borrowing for consumers and businesses steadily more expensive.

In a statement after its latest policy meeting, the Fed removed a previous sentence that had said “some additional” rate hikes might be needed. It replaced it with language that said it will consider a range of factors in “determining the extent” to which future hikes might be needed.




The Fed’s rate increases over the past 14 months have more than doubled mortgage rates, elevated the costs of auto loans, credit card borrowing and business loans and heightened the risk of a recession. Home sales have plunged as a result. The Fed’s latest move, which raised its benchmark rate to roughly 5.1%, could further increase borrowing costs.

Still, the Fed’s statement offered little indication that its string of rate hikes have made significant progress toward its goal of cooling the economy, the job market and inflation. Inflation has fallen from a peak of 9.1% in June to 5% in March but remains well above the Fed’s 2% target rate.




“Job gains have been robust in recent months, and the unemployment rate has remained low,” the statement said. “Inflation remains elevated.”

The surge in rates has contributed to the collapse of three large banks and turmoil in the banking industry. All three failed banks had bought long-term bonds that paid low rates and then rapidly lost value as the Fed sent rates higher.



The banking upheaval might have played a role in the Fed’s decision Wednesday to consider a pause. Chair Jerome Powell had said in March that a cutback in lending by banks, to shore up their finances, could act as the equivalent of a quarter-point rate hike in slowing the economy.

Fed economists have estimated that tighter credit resulting from the bank failures will contribute to a “mild recession” later this year, thereby raising the pressure on the central bank to suspend its rate hikes.

The Fed is now also grappling with the threat of a prolonged standoff around the nation’s borrowing limit, which caps how much debt the government can issue. Congressional Republicans are demanding steep spending cuts as the price of agreeing to lift the nation’s borrowing cap.

The Fed’s decision Wednesday came against an increasingly cloudy backdrop. The economy appears to be cooling, with consumer spending flat in February and March, indicating that many shoppers have grown cautious in the face of higher prices and borrowing costs. Manufacturing, too, is weakening.


Even the surprisingly resilient job market, which has kept the unemployment rate near 50-year lows for months, is showing cracks. Hiring has decelerated, job postings have declined and fewer people are quitting their jobs for other, typically higher-paying positions.

The turmoil in the nation’s banking sector, which re-erupted last weekend as regulators seized and sold off First Republic Bank, has intensified the pressure on the economy. It was the second-largest U.S. bank failure ever and the third major banking collapse in the past six weeks. Investors have grown anxious about whether other regional banks may suffer from similar problems.


Goldman Sachs estimates that a widespread pullback in bank lending could cut U.S. growth by 0.4 percentage point this year. That could be enough to cause a recession. In December, the Fed projected growth of just 0.5% in 2023.

Wall Street traders were also unnerved by this week’s announcement from Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen that the nation could default on its debt as soon as June 1 unless Congress agrees to lift the debt limit, which caps how much the government can borrow. A first-ever default on the U.S. debt could potentially lead to a global financial crisis.

The Fed’s rate hike Wednesday comes as other major central banks are also tightening credit. European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde is expected to announce another interest rate increase Thursday, after inflation figures released Tuesday showed that price increases ticked up last month.

Consumer prices rose 7% in the 20 countries that use the euro currency in April from a year earlier, up from a 6.9% year-over-year increase in March.

In the United States, some major drivers of higher prices have stalled or started to reverse, causing slowdowns in overall inflation. The consumer price index rose 5% in March from a year earlier, sharply lower than its 9.1% peak in June.

The rise in rental costs has eased as more newly built apartments have come online. Gas and energy prices have fallen steadily. Food costs are moderating. Supply chain snarls are no longer blocking trade, thereby lowering the cost for new and used cars, furniture and appliances.


Still, while overall inflation has cooled, “core” inflation — which excludes volatile food and energy costs — has remained chronically high. According to the Fed’s preferred measure, core prices rose 4.6% in March from a year earlier, scarcely better than the 4.7% it reached in July.

 
Raising interest rates isn't going to bring down food and energy prices very much.
 
Raising interest rates isn't going to bring down food and energy prices very much.
True but those types of companies are also generating record profits because they can. Food and energy prices won’t come down until producers have to cut their own costs. Making loans more prohibitive is one way to do that I guess.

Not saying it’s a right or wrong decision. Two or more things can be true though.
 
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It's the only tool the Fed has. It does nothing to address the two major underlying causes of this inflationary cycle. Inflation is much higher for food and energy, and raising interest rates only slows big ticket items bought on credit.

If the Fed had any balls whatsoever, they would call out Congress for reckless deficit spending, and urge fiscal restraint.
 
It's the only tool the Fed has. It does nothing to address the two major underlying causes of this inflationary cycle. Inflation is much higher for food and energy, and raising interest rates only slows big ticket items bought on credit.

If the Fed had any balls whatsoever, they would call out Congress for reckless deficit spending, and urge fiscal restraint.
I don’t think i’ve even seen anyone ask that question in the press conferences for the hikes.
 
It's the only tool the Fed has. It does nothing to address the two major underlying causes of this inflationary cycle. Inflation is much higher for food and energy, and raising interest rates only slows big ticket items bought on credit.

If the Fed had any balls whatsoever, they would call out Congress for reckless deficit spending, and urge fiscal restraint.
Whereas if Congress had any balls, it would raise taxes on the rich and corporations, impose windfall profits taxes, and implement short term price caps as needed.
 
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Biden should pressure the fed to keep rates low.. hell they should be negative!... plus lets increase spending AND cut taxes (these pay for themselves so really it is paying for the spending!)... the winning formula.
 
It's the only tool the Fed has. It does nothing to address the two major underlying causes of this inflationary cycle. Inflation is much higher for food and energy, and raising interest rates only slows big ticket items bought on credit.

If the Fed had any balls whatsoever, they would call out Congress for reckless deficit spending, and urge fiscal restraint.

It's not the only tool they have. It's the most effective, but not the only one. They could also increase reserve requirements and they could do some more QT to pull more liquidity out of the economy.

And, TBF to Powell, he did in fact call out congress during the last meeting. As he was getting grilled by congress, he said I am using the tools at my disposal, and that it would help if he could get some assistance from the fiscal side of policy. It shut the questions up, but that is about it.
 
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This really should be the last hike. I was gonna buy a new house this fall, but fvck man, this shit is getting ridiculous.
One of the few areas where the FED could have an impact is with the housing market. In fact, we likely would've seen a pretty substantial retraction already at this point. The problem is, as long as there are low supply numbers for houses across the board, they could raise the funds rate to 15% and I don't think it would make much difference, true housing stagflation right now. Builders have under built in the past 15 years. The only thing I see higher rates doing at this point is pushing us off the unemployment cliff.
 
One of the few areas where the FED could have an impact is with the housing market. In fact, we likely would've seen a pretty substantial retraction already at this point. The problem is, as long as there are low supply numbers for houses across the board, they could raise the funds rate to 15% and I don't think it would make much difference, true housing stagflation right now. Builders have under built in the past 15 years. The only thing I see higher rates doing at this point is pushing us off the unemployment cliff.

For consumers, maybe. But the fed is playing a big role on capital investment right now. It is down substantially.
 
Houses are going up all over the place here in Florida. Developers are developing.
Yeah, unfortunately here in Pinellas Co. there is no where to expand to. Tampa has tons of room to grow out, but fvck Tampa in their stupid trashpa faces.

#stpete4life
 
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