Peter Coy
OPINION
The Fed’s Newfound Aggressiveness Is Concerning
June 17,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/06/17/opinion/inflation-interest-rate-recession.html
Peter Coy
By Peter
Coy
Opinion
Writer
When it
comes to fighting inflation, Esther George is accustomed to being a hawk among
doves. Now, in a strange turnabout, she is a dove among hawks. George, the
president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, was the only member of
the Federal Open Market Committee to vote on Wednesday against the Fed’s
increase of three-quarters of a percentage point in the key short-term lending
rate it controls. She favored a half-percentage-point increase.
On Friday
George released a statement explaining her vote against the increase — the
biggest Fed rate hike since 1994. She agreed with the goal of fighting
inflation, but wrote: “However, the speed with which we adjust the policy rate
is important. Policy changes affect the economy with a lag, and significant and
abrupt changes can be unsettling to households and small businesses as they
make necessary adjustments.” She added that the rapid increases could put
stress on community banks.
I share her
concern about the Fed’s newfound aggressiveness. Raising interest rates sharply
to cool demand for goods and services could very well cause a recession. If the
Fed were to stop at this rate increase, the risk would be small, but that’s not
the plan: According to projections released on Wednesday, the median expectation
among members of the Federal Open Market Committee is for the top end of the
target range for the federal funds rate to reach nearly 3.5 percent by the end
of this year, up from 1.75 percent now and 0.25 percent when the year started.
Investors
are clearly worried. For most of the period since the global financial crisis
of 2007 to 2009, stocks tended to rise, on average, when interest rates went
up. Why? One theory is that inflation was a distant concern and higher rates
tended to reflect optimism about economic growth.
Lately,
though, stocks have tended to fall when interest rates have gone up. The chart
below shows that. To be clear, this chart compares stocks to bonds, not to
interest rates. But there’s a tight connection: Bond prices fall when interest
rates go up (and, conversely, rise when interest rates fall). So the recent
increase in the correlation between stock returns and bond returns means that
when bond prices fall (because interest rates are rising), stock prices tend to
fall as well. The correlation of returns became strongly positive in 2021, fell
back and is now again in positive territory, on average, over the past 65 days,
according to data supplied to me by the London-based organization Absolute
Strategy Research.
If stocks
continue to fall when interest rates rise (which is not clear yet), it will
amplify the impact of the Fed’s rate hikes. The reason this matters is that the
stock market isn’t just a barometer of the economy. It’s also part of the
economy. When stocks fall, people who own shares become poorer and rein in
their spending. Businesses curtail investments. That slows economic growth and
increases unemployment.
There are
other reasons to think the U.S. economy and inflation are beginning to cool
off, even without extreme measures by the Fed. The big increase in the price of
gasoline, which has caught everyone’s attention, is taking money from consumers
that they could otherwise spend on other things. It’s significant that retail
sales fell in May from April, even though they had been expected to rise. The
dollar is strong, which will restrain import prices.
The housing
market, whose health is pivotal to the economy, is under stress. The average
rate on 30-year fixed-rate mortgages rose to 5.8 percent this week, from 3.1
percent at the beginning of the year, according to Freddie Mac. At the new pace
of sales, the number of new homes for sale jumped in April to a nine-month
supply, from about six months’ worth in February, according to the Census
Bureau. That’s an enormous jump. “The housing market never likes significant
rises in mortgage rates in short time periods, and it’s not liking this one,
either,” Douglas Duncan, the chief economist at Fannie Mae, told me.
“We’re not
trying to induce a recession now,” the Federal Reserve chair, Jerome Powell,
said at a news conference after the meeting of the Federal Open Market
Committee on Wednesday. Of course they aren’t. But that just might be the
result.


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