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Fed Raises Rates by 0.75% as Rampant Inflation Forces Biggest Hike Since 1994

Published 06/15/2022, 02:00 PM
Updated 06/15/2022, 04:38 PM
© Reuters

By Yasin Ebrahim

Investing.com -- The Federal Reserve surprised markets on Wednesday with a larger than expected 0.75% rate increase as persistently high inflation compelled the central bank to deliver its biggest hike at a single meeting since 1994.

The Federal Open Market Committee raised its benchmark rate to a range of 1.5% to 1.75% from 0.75% to 1% previously. That was more hawkish than economists’ expectations for a 0.5% rate hike.  

In the weeks leading up to the decision, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said he wasn't “actively considering” a 0.75% rate increase and signaled that a 0.5% hike would be appropriate at the June and July meetings. 

But several signs showing above-trend inflation could stick around for longer than feared forced the central bank to step up the pace of monetary policy tightening to prevent falling further behind in the battle against inflation.

The Fed now sees its benchmark rate rising to 3.4% in 2022, markedly above the 1.9% forecast in March. With four meetings remaining on the Fed's calendar, a further 0.75% rate hike is likely. 

"From the perspective of today, either a 50 basis point or a 75 basis point increase seems most likely at our next meeting," Powell said in the press conference that followed the policy decision on Wednesday. 

The Fed chairman, however, also signaled that the central bank was keen to "front-load," or deliver large hikes now, potentially paving the way for a slowdown later.

"[W]e came to the view that we’d like to do a little more front-end loading, [...] today's 75-basis-point increase is an unusually large one, and I do not expect moves of this size to be common," Powell added.

The steeper than expected rate hike pushes the Fed closer to reaching the neutral rate – a rate that neither improves the economy nor slows it down. The Fed had previously signaled that it was eager to move “expeditiously” to a restrictive stance, above the neutral rate, to bring down demand and cool inflation.

Inflation, meanwhile, isn't expected to reach the Fed's 2% target anytime soon. The core personal consumption expenditures price index, the Fed’s preferred inflation, is forecast to climb to 4.3% in 2022, up from a prior forecast of 4.1%. For 2023, inflation is estimated to drop to 2.7%, compared with the prior forecast of 2.6%, while in 2024 inflation expectations are unchanged at 2.3%.  

Restoring supply and demand in the labor market is key to the central bank’s plans. A tight labor market in which there are about two jobs for every unemployed American – threatens to fuel a wage spiral that could push inflation beyond the Fed’s reach. 

Some on Wall Street have suggested that job gains would have to reverse before the Fed considers taking a step back.  "No fun 'til [the] Fed [is] done... and in 2022 that requires [a] negative payroll print," Bank of America said last week.

The Fed is betting that its policy will help bring some balance to the labor market, with members now seeing the unemployment rate at 3.7% at year-end, up slightly from a prior forecast of 3.5%.   

The era of aggressive Fed tightening has many worried that the central bank could overshoot on policy tightening, slowing the economy by too much into recession.

Despite cutting their growth outlook, Fed members continue to bet that a recession will be avoided, forecasting the economy to grow 1.7% in 2022, down sharply from a prior forecast of 2.8%. 

Still, fears of a recession have been most prevalent in the bond market, where the yield curve continues to flatten – a sign that bond traders appear to be losing confidence in the Fed’s ability to avoid a hard landing. 

The Fed’s plan to shrink its nearly $9 trillion balance sheet got underway on Wednesday, as the first tranche of debt, or Treasury securities, matured.

The quantitative tightening plan will initially allow $30 billion in Treasury securities and $17.5 billion in agency MBS to roll off its balance sheet, with the intent of gradually stepping up the pace after three months to $60 billion and $35 billion per month, respectively.

Latest comments

#inflation  A 0.75% hike is better than a 0.50% hike but it is not enough. Did anyone at the FED ever apologize to the public that their economics model made a big mistake by predicting that inflation was transitory? The FED is so behind the curve that the 0.75% hike is completely dwarfed by the 8.6% inflation.
everything is bullish for no reason. guess the recession is over. stupid traders pushing this higher
The Federal Reserve surprised markets on Wednesday with a larger than expected 0.75% rate increase......no that was not a surprise, everyone expected that, even my 🐕
there USA lost the dall....inlestion up 15%... high interest rates are poor and hungry.... good luck USA...
Oh, highest rate hike since '96. What about inflation, highest since 1981. Figure it out. We're all paying for it.
Why did you spend all the stimulus in 2020 and 2021?!
When does the rate hike happen exactly?
Recession is here. Get use to it.
a lot of people are confused as to why markets behave like a drunk driver. market should be much flatter. problem us the gamblers are now running the show. look to 500 point drop tomorrow
Thank you Donald Trump and Joe Biden for $8 trillion dollars doubling our money supply when is my part coming?
22 minutes to close. Dow up 538. At close it will be down 538. Market is a joke!!!!
So JPow holds a nees conference in which he promises more aggressive rate hikes and the markets, which have been dropping for fear of such rate hikes, decides to go green. What am I missing here?
He did NOT promise more aggressive rate hikes
More certainty for now
Fear has been taken away. People know what to expect now. Fear is a powerful thing.
Why do we bother trading options anymore. Picked up DOW calls earlier when the DOW was +$200. It goes up $300 and my calls are worth 10 cents less than what I paid for them.. All we're allowed to do is buy stock.
":volatility crush"
why to bother people with rate , rather print more money and distribute it.... problem solved 😂😂
Print currency. Can't print money (gold).
must be sarcasm
Still not enough. We need 800bps.
*******BS. Rate hikes but market is up. LMAO
Another "late trade" miracle, the most flagrant in weeks, as Wall Street laughs in the face of the US working class.  THE BIGGEST INVESTMENT JOKE IN THE WORLD.
El Salvador has entered the chat....
atlanta GDP NOW....now at 0.0% GDP forecast
fed... my f00t. saying market. :)
Powell said monetary policy alone won't fix things.  People need to stop thinking the Fed should be all-seeing and a panacea for all economic ills.  The Fed has NO control over the Kremlin nor the CCP.
DEATH TO THE EURO...its about time
The excessive exuberance continues…. Everyone is living like a rock star whether they can afford to or not…. This won’t end well
Don’t know why my comment was not posted. So now in other wording. 75 basispoints won’t do anything to inflation. Instead it will slowly slow growth, effect is 6 months. In the mean time, high dollar will push up inflation abroad and this will boomerang back. The stock market will turn into a minefield coming earning season. Buy gold for 2 reasons now. Hedge against inflation and risk management
Fed suspense over. Party on!
why gold up side move now ❓️❓️🤣🤣🤣
 Timoth thanks for the above. Other central banks will be raising rates following the FED. I think we have seen a piek in the US dollar witch should favor gold. I think it won’t go under 1800 for that matter because every rate hike by the ecb of uk will push the dollar down
Also: https://www.zawya.com/en/economy/gcc/25-of-central-banks-to-boost-gold-holdings-amid-global-uncertainty-kcxqvrxc
O and basel3
lets think that for a moment if you are a salaried employees in future you think that your salary will decrease. although all products and services prices will increasing so how can u think that fed rates will go down....and friends no one can stop....
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