Central banks, still waiting for relief on inflation, lean higher on rates

WASHINGTON/FRANKFURT, June 15 (Reuters) – Two years into confronting rising inflation, the world’s top central banks are still waiting for a decisive turn in their favor, with monetary policy continuing to edge ever tighter and policymakers promising they won’t relent in defending their common 2% inflation target.

The European Central Bank on Thursday raised its key interest rates by another quarter of a percentage point, but more notably raised its inflation outlook to show prices still rising through 2025 at what ECB President Christine Lagarde said was an “unacceptable level.”

More rate increases were coming, she said.

“Are we done? Have we finished the journey? No … Do we still have ground to cover? Yes … Barring a material change to our baseline, it is very likely the case that we will continue to increase rates in July,” Lagarde said in a press conference following the ECB decision.

Her comments were stronger than those of the U.S. Federal Reserve on Wednesday, when policymakers opted to hold rates steady after 10 consecutive hikes that pushed the central bank’s benchmark overnight interest rate to the 5.00%-5.25% range.

But that was largely a precaution, to take stock for a few weeks of where the economy is heading.

New U.S. policymaker projections showed the inflation fight also lasting longer than previously expected and requiring a tighter-than-anticipated path for policy moving forward.

“If you look at the full range of inflation data, particularly the core data, you just aren’t seeing a lot of progress over the last year,” Fed Chair Jerome Powell said after the end of this week’s two-day policy meeting at which, like the ECB, officials raised their estimates of where inflation will end this year and showed a slower trip back to the 2% target.

“Perhaps more restraint will be necessary than we thought at the last meeting,” Powell said of policymaker projections that two more quarter-percentage-point rate increases will be needed by the end of this year.

Fed policymakers paused on its rate hikes since March 2022, and kept the federal funds target rate unchanged at 5.25%, its highest level since August 2007.

The Bank of England meets next week and is also expected to continue raising rates amid faster-than-expected inflation, while the Reserve Bank of Australia and the Bank of Canada recently resumed their rate hikes after having paused them earlier this year.

The Bank of Japan, which will issue a new policy decision on Friday, remains an outlier with promises to continue loose policy until inflation meets the 2% target.

The others, however, now share a predicament that is part waiting game, part data analysis, and part risk management.

LAST MILE

The Fed’s pause was partly out of respect for the time lag between rate increases and their impact on the economy.

But both Powell and Lagarde said that while they were watching carefully to see how the impact of policy accumulates, their patience could not be infinite.

The ECB needs to see the effects of policy go “all the way down to inflation,” Lagarde said. “We’re going to get to that 2%.”

Reuters Graphics

The data show what may prove to be a developing “last-mile” problem for the major central banks, which faced similar outbreaks of inflation during the COVID-19 pandemic reopening, though each had slightly different sources and contours.

Some, and particularly the Fed, saw initial improvement as the reopening proceeded, commerce returned to normal, and goods shipments rebounded.

But over time the sources of inflation rotated from one spot of the economy to another. Lagarde said she is now concerned wages will drive prices higher even as energy and food, the initial culprits, are now aiding the cause; in the U.S. there is concern about that as well as ongoing high demand and excess savings in the hands of consumers.

That has meant a slow expected return to target.

As in Europe, U.S. inflation is projected by the Fed to remain above target at the end of 2025, though policymakers see it close by then, at about 2.1%.

Reuters Graphics

In the meantime, efforts to balance risks have led policymakers to slow the pace of rate increases even as they refrain from any precise steer towards a “terminal,” or peak, interest rate for the current tightening cycle.

Lagarde said the endpoint “is something we will know when we get there” because of how inflation is behaving.

Powell, as well, said that even though “the risks of sort of overdoing it and underdoing it are getting closer to being balanced,” the focus remains on inflation.

“I still think, and my colleagues agree, that the risks to inflation are to the upside,” Powell said. “What we’d like to see is credible evidence that inflation is topping out and then beginning to come down.”

Reporting by Howard Schneider;
Editing by Dan Burns and Paul Simao

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Howard Schneider

Thomson Reuters

Covers the U.S. Federal Reserve, monetary policy and the economy, a graduate of the University of Maryland and Johns Hopkins University with previous experience as a foreign correspondent, economics reporter and on the local staff of the Washington Post.

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