Yellen's Decision to Delay Fed Liftoff Points to Global Risks
The
Federal Reserve kept its policy interest rate unchanged, showing
reluctance to end an era of record monetary stimulus in a time of market
turmoil, rising international risks and slow inflation at home.
“Recent
global economic and financial developments may restrain economic
activity somewhat and are likely to put further downward pressure on
inflation in the near term,” the Fed said in its statement.
Thursday’s
action signified more than anything the committee’s uncertainty about
how global events, such as the slowdown in China, translate into their
outlook for U.S. growth.
‘Tactical Delay’
“Discretion is the better part of valor,”
Ethan Harris, co-head of global economic research at Bank of America
Corp. in New York, wrote in an e-mail. The move is a “tactical delay” to
gather more information on risks to the forecast, and “as the labor
market recovery rolls along, and with capital markets already showing
signs of calm, the pressure on the Fed to hike will build at each
meeting going forward.”
The decision featured the first dissent
this year by Richmond Fed President Jeffrey Lacker as policy makers
faced one of the toughest decisions of Chair Janet Yellen’s leadership of the Federal Open Market Committee.
Yellen ‘Put’
It
also bears its own set of risks, such as the perception of a “Yellen
put,” or the view that market volatility could stay the Fed’s decision
again.
“They put more emphasis on things that could go wrong than things that are going right,” Harm Bandholz, chief U.S. economist at UniCredit Bank AG in New York, said before the decision. The U.S. economy is posting steady
job gains and solid household spending. Fed officials, anxious not to
tighten policy prematurely and risk having to reverse course and cut
rates back to zero, weighed solid domestic fundamentals against
uncertainties about the international outlook.
“The Committee
continues to see the risks to the outlook for economic activity and the
labor market as nearly balanced but is monitoring developments abroad,”
the statement said.
Global Developments
Slowing growth in
China has rippled across the world, hitting commodity-producing
countries hard. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index, which captures stock
markets in nations such as Brazil, Chile, Egypt and China, is down 14 percent this year. “The outlook for the global economy is being marked down and that is why markets are reacting,”
Laura Rosner, U.S. economist at BNP Paribas, said before the decision.
Market developments are giving policy makers “fundamental, new and
real-time information,” the former New York Fed staff analyst said.
Domestically, Fed officials are also grappling with an inflation rate that remains too low, rising just
0.3 percent for the 12 months ended July, according to the personal
consumption expenditures price index, the Fed’s preferred measure.
“The case for not going is that the inflation picture is still extremely murky, especially in light of developments in China,” Ward McCarthy, chief financial economist at Jefferies LLC in New York, said before the decision.
The
PCE index has run below the Fed’s 2 percent target for more than three
years. “They need to clarify” their inflation target strategy, McCarthy
added.
Officials Thursday said they don’t expect to attain their 2
percent goal until 2018, according to policy makers’ median forecast.
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