Fed to raise rates again, eyeing inflation

21 Mar, 2005

Odds are the US Federal Reserve this week will extend a steady-as-it-goes strategy of nudging interest rates up in quarter-percentage point steps, pledging more of the same while keeping a wary eye on prices. Despite signs some officials on the Fed's policy panel were growing restive about words in its post-meeting statement forecasting "measured" rises, which have taken the target federal funds rate to 2.5 percent in six successive moves, it's likely too soon to scrap the language, analysts said.
One reason is that soaring oil prices have created some worry about their potential drag on economic growth and another is that Fed policy-makers, who have worked to make their decision-making less opaque, have not yet signalled they are on the cusp of policy change.
"At some point they will depart from this very, very regimented course," said Richard DeKaser, chief economist for National City Corp in Cleveland, "But I just don't think we're there yet."
In February testimony to Congress, Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan sealed the direction of policy by saying rates remained "fairly low" after six hikes from a 46-year low of 1 percent in June.
So rates are going up, at least over the near term.
The only real drama is when the Fed will decide the federal funds rate is close enough to "neutral" - a level that neither spurs nor hinders growth - that it can drop a pledge of measured rises.
Doing so would give it more leeway to respond to economic trends, including to data indicating problematic price pressures that might potentially call for larger increases.
"Dropping the language is now just a matter of timing," London-based Capital Economics Ltd predicted in a commentary on Friday. But it added that it expected the "measured" wording to remain "for the time being."
Fed officials have not evinced any sharp discontent with current strategy. Fed Governor Ben Bernanke said last month the pace of price rises was not yet threatening: "I currently think inflation remains well-controlled, therefore I'm comfortable with our policy of removing accommodation at a measured pace."
The Fed has been running a policy of relatively low interest rates that it characterizes as accommodative because the Fed funds rate is so far below rates that would be considered normal for an expanding economy.
But there have been a few disquieting developments, including a jump in January core producer or wholesale prices of 0.8 percent in January and a spike in oil costs above $57 a barrel last week.
Exactly where the Fed's preferred "neutral" rate for the fed funds rate lies is hard to pin down, but it is generally taken to be somewhere between 3 and 5 percent, or about 2 percentage points above prevailing inflation.
The one dissonant note has come from Atlanta Fed President Jack Guynn, also speaking late last month, who warned against complacency and said there were potential "bottlenecks" in the economy that could foster inflation.
"In my opinion, the present fed funds rate is still accommodative, and with an economic expansion that now seems to be well-established, I believe the Fed still has a ways to go in recalibrating economic policy," Guynn said.
During February, the nation's factories, mines and utilities hummed at 79.4 percent of their capacity - the highest rate since 80.3 percent in December 2000 though still below levels that trigger sirens about inflation.
On balance, analysts believe the Fed does not yet have sufficient cause to immediately alter its policy course.

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