Tradingfxdaily.com
  • Home
  • Forex
  • Crypto News
    • NFT News
  • World News
  • Business
  • Stock Market
  • Economic Calendar
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Forex
  • Crypto News
    • NFT News
  • World News
  • Business
  • Stock Market
  • Economic Calendar
No Result
View All Result
Tradingfxdaily.com
No Result
View All Result
Home Business

Fed Confronts a ‘New World’ of Inflation

tradingfxdaily by tradingfxdaily
June 24, 2022
in Business
0
Fed Confronts a ‘New World’ of Inflation
189
SHARES
1.5k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Related articles

Shareholder Advisory Firm Backs Spirit-Frontier Merger

Shareholder Advisory Firm Backs Spirit-Frontier Merger

June 25, 2022
Employees Scrambled to Keep Robinhood Afloat in January 2021 Meme-Stock Frenzy, House Report Finds

Employees Scrambled to Keep Robinhood Afloat in January 2021 Meme-Stock Frenzy, House Report Finds

June 25, 2022

Federal Reserve officials are questioning whether their longstanding assumptions about inflation still apply as price gains remain stubbornly and surprisingly rapid — a bout of economic soul-searching that could have big implications for the American economy.

For years, Fed policymakers had a playbook for handling inflation surprises: They mostly ignored disruptions to the supply of goods and services when setting monetary policy, assuming they would work themselves out. The Fed guides the economy by adjusting interest rates, which influence demand, so keeping consumption and business activity chugging along at an even keel was the primary focus.

But after the global economy has been rocked for two years by nonstop supply crises — from shipping snarls to the war in Ukraine — central bankers have stopped waiting for normality to return. They have been raising interest rates aggressively to slow down consumer and business spending and cool the economy. And they are reassessing how inflation might evolve in a world where it seems that the problems may just keep coming.

If the Fed determines that shocks are unlikely to ease — or will take so long that they leave inflation elevated for years — the result could be an even more aggressive series of rate increases as policymakers try to quash demand into balance with a more limited supply of goods and services. That painful process would ramp up the risk of a recession that would cost jobs and shutter businesses.

“The disinflationary forces of the last quarter-century have been replaced, at least temporarily, by a whole different set of forces,” Jerome H. Powell, the Fed chair, said during Senate testimony on Wednesday. “The real question is: How long will this new set of forces be sustained? We can’t know that. But in the meantime, our job is to find maximum employment and price stability in this new economy.”

When prices began to pick up rapidly in early 2021, top Fed policymakers joined many outside economists in predicting that the change would be “transitory.” Inflation had been slow in America for most of the 21st century, weighed down by long-running trends like the aging of the population and globalization. It seemed that one-off pandemic shocks, especially a used-car shortage and ocean shipping issues, should fade with time and allow that trend to return.

But by late last year, central bankers were beginning to rethink their initial call. Supply chain problems were becoming worse, not better. Instead of fading, price increases had accelerated and broadened beyond a few pandemic-affected categories. Economists have made a monthly habit of predicting that inflation has peaked only to see it continue to accelerate.

Now, Fed policymakers are analyzing what so many people missed, and what it says about the unrelenting inflation burst.

“Of course we’ve been looking very carefully and hard at why inflation picked up so much more than expected last year and why it proved so persistent,” Mr. Powell said at a news conference last week. “It’s hard to overstate the extent of interest we have in that question, morning, noon and night.”

The Fed has been reacting. It slowed and then halted its pandemic-era bond purchases this winter and spring, and it is now shrinking its asset holdings to take a little bit of juice out of markets and the economy. The central bank has also ramped up its plans to raise interest rates, lifting its main policy rate by a quarter point in March, half a point in May and three-quarters of a point last week while signaling more to come.

Understand Inflation and How It Impacts You

It is making those decisions without much of an established game plan, given the surprising ways in which the economy is behaving.

“We’ve spent a lot of time — as a committee, and I’ve spent a lot of time personally — looking at history,” Patrick Harker, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, said in an interview on Wednesday. “Nothing quite fits this situation.”

The economic era before the pandemic was stable and predictable. America and many developed economies spent those decades grappling with inflation that seemed to be slipping ever lower. Consumers had come to expect prices to remain relatively stable, and executives knew that they could not charge a lot more without scaring them away.

Shocks to supply that were outside the Fed’s control, like oil or food shortages, might push up prices for a while, but they typically faded quickly. Now, the whole idea of “transient” supply shocks is being called into question.

The global supply of goods has been curtailed by one issue after another since the onset of the pandemic, from lockdowns in China that slowed the production of computer chips and other goods to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which has limited gas and food availability.

At the same time, demand has been heady, boosted by government pandemic relief checks and a strong labor market. Businesses have been able to charge more for their limited supply, and consumer prices have been picking up sharply, climbing 8.6 percent over the year through May.

Research from the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco released this week found that demand was driving about one-third of the current jump in inflation, while issues tied to supply or some ambiguous mix of supply-and-demand factors were driving about two-thirds.

That means that returning demand to more normal levels should help ease inflation somewhat, even if supply in key markets remain roiled. The Fed has been clear that it cannot directly lower oil and gas prices, for instance, because those costs turn more on the global supply than they do on domestic demand.

“There’s really not anything that we can do about oil prices,” Mr. Powell told senators on Wednesday. Still, he added later, “there is a job to moderating demand so that it can be in better balance with supply.”

Inflation F.A.Q.


Card 1 of 5

What is inflation? Inflation is a loss of purchasing power over time, meaning your dollar will not go as far tomorrow as it did today. It is typically expressed as the annual change in prices for everyday goods and services such as food, furniture, apparel, transportation and toys.

What causes inflation? It can be the result of rising consumer demand. But inflation can also rise and fall based on developments that have little to do with economic conditions, such as limited oil production and supply chain problems.

Is inflation bad? It depends on the circumstances. Fast price increases spell trouble, but moderate price gains can lead to higher wages and job growth.

Can inflation affect the stock market? Rapid inflation typically spells trouble for stocks. Financial assets in general have historically fared badly during inflation booms, while tangible assets like houses have held their value better.

But it also means that if the supply shortages that are driving so much of inflation today fail to ease, the Fed could need a more punishing response — one that weakens the economy drastically to bring demand in line — to return annual price increases to more normal 2 percent levels.

The path to lower inflation without causing a recession “has been made significantly more challenging by the events of the last few months, thinking there of the war and, you know, commodities prices, and further problems with supply chains,” Mr. Powell said Wednesday.

Asked if containing inflation would require causing very high unemployment, Mr. Powell said on Thursday that “the answer is going to depend, to a significant extent, on what happens on a supply side.”

There’s an important reason that Fed officials cannot wait indefinitely for supply to recover. Should supply shocks and higher prices last long enough, they could persuade consumers to expect inflation to endure — changing behavior in ways that make rapid price increases a more permanent feature of the economy. Workers might ask for bigger wage growth to cover anticipated rent and grocery price increases, prompting employers to charge more as they try to cover swelling labor bills.

Plus, the jump in food and energy costs caused by the war in Ukraine could seep into other prices, making it more expensive to provide a restaurant meal, travel by air and bus, or heat a hotel room.

“Typically, there’s a sort of light at the end of the tunnel,” said Omair Sharif, founder of the research firm Inflation Insights. Usually, he explained, gas and food supplies in particular are disrupted by short-lived events rather than by wars that could drag on for months or years.

“I think their concern is: This is not the energy shock of old,” Mr. Sharif said. “The higher it stays and the longer it stays high, the more likely it will bleed into a lot of other things.”

Some supply disruptions may be getting better. Chip production has shown some signs of ramping up, which could take pressure off the car and electronic markets. Swollen inventories of some goods at retailers like Target are likely to send prices lower as the companies try to clear their shelves. But economists warn that it is too early to call any glimmers of hope conclusive.

“The supply chain is Whac-a-Mole,” Tom Barkin, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, said during a webinar on Tuesday. “People say you solve one problem and then you have another one.”

For now, central bankers are trying to quickly lift interest rates to a place that clearly restrains the economy — at which point they will assess just how much more is needed.

“We have to find price stability in this new world,” Mr. Powell said last week.

Source link

Share76Tweet47

Related Posts

Shareholder Advisory Firm Backs Spirit-Frontier Merger

Shareholder Advisory Firm Backs Spirit-Frontier Merger

by tradingfxdaily
June 25, 2022
0

The influential shareholder advisory service Institutional Shareholder Services is now advising Spirit Airlines’s investors to vote in favor of a...

Employees Scrambled to Keep Robinhood Afloat in January 2021 Meme-Stock Frenzy, House Report Finds

Employees Scrambled to Keep Robinhood Afloat in January 2021 Meme-Stock Frenzy, House Report Finds

by tradingfxdaily
June 25, 2022
0

Robinhood Markets struggled to handle huge volumes of stock trading and sparred with its principal customer, market maker Citadel Securities,...

The Secret to Retiring Comfortably at 62

The Secret to Retiring Comfortably at 62

by tradingfxdaily
June 25, 2022
0

The key to retiring at 62 is to assess your current assets, estimate future income and preferred lifestyle, including whether...

Biden ‘respects’ Supreme Court despite abortion ruling, White House says By Reuters

by tradingfxdaily
June 25, 2022
0

© Reuters. U.S. President Joe Biden speaks before signing S. 2938: Bipartisan Safer Communities Act into law from the Roosevelt...

Hydrogen's Spark Gets Swamped by Rising Interest Rates

Hydrogen's Spark Gets Swamped by Rising Interest Rates

by tradingfxdaily
June 25, 2022
0

Vladimir Putin has given low-carbon hydrogen projects a lift this year, but you wouldn’t know it by looking at the...

Load More
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Short SPX: Top Trade Opportunities

Short SPX: Top Trade Opportunities

April 5, 2022
Tesla Stock Split: What to Know as EV Maker Prepares to Split Its Stock in 2022

Tesla Stock Split: What to Know as EV Maker Prepares to Split Its Stock in 2022

March 28, 2022
What is Leverage in Forex? Forex Leverage Explained

What is Leverage in Forex? Forex Leverage Explained

April 19, 2022

Larry Fink says globalization is over — Here’s what it means for the markets

March 26, 2022
The Top 5 Metaverses to Look Out for in 2022

The Top 5 Metaverses to Look Out for in 2022

March 26, 2022
BOJ not signaling a lack of tolerance for JPY weakness; USD/JPY to remain elevated – CIBC

BOJ not signaling a lack of tolerance for JPY weakness; USD/JPY to remain elevated – CIBC

0

In a Less-Globalized World, Be Careful Where You Park Your Plane

0
Cardano pares most of its Q1 losses as ADA rebounds 60% in a month — What’s next? By Cointelegraph

Cardano pares most of its Q1 losses as ADA rebounds 60% in a month — What’s next? By Cointelegraph

0

Larry Fink says globalization is over — Here’s what it means for the markets

0
Natural-Gas Industry Gets Boost as Biden Shifts Stance

Natural-Gas Industry Gets Boost as Biden Shifts Stance

0
BOJ not signaling a lack of tolerance for JPY weakness; USD/JPY to remain elevated – CIBC

BOJ not signaling a lack of tolerance for JPY weakness; USD/JPY to remain elevated – CIBC

June 26, 2022
AUD/USD plummets and reaches a fresh monthly low at 0.7235 on dismal sentiment and Fed commentary

AUD/USD hits two-day highs above 0.6950 on dollar weakness

June 26, 2022
Hawkish vs Dovish Explained

DAX, DOW and FTSE Mixed as Global Growth Signals Slowdown

June 26, 2022
U.S. says advanced hackers have shown ability to hijack critical infrastructure By Reuters

Exclusive-Copper giant Codelco sees ‘very firm’ copper price ahead despite recent drop

June 26, 2022
USD/CAD turns higher as oil gives back some gains

USD/CAD turns higher as oil gives back some gains

June 26, 2022
Tradingfxdaily.com

Tradingfxdaily.com is your Forex, Stock News, World News, Crypto Currency News, Business News & NFT News Website. We provide you with the latest breaking news and videos straight from the Trading industry.

  • Home
  • About us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy

© 2022 - All Right Reserved. tradingfxdaily.com

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Forex
  • Crypto News
    • NFT News
  • World News
  • Business
  • Stock Market
  • Economic Calendar

© 2022 - All Right Reserved. tradingfxdaily.com

EURUSD=X 
$1.06  0.33%  
EURCAD=X 
$1.36  -0.53%  
EURJPY=X 
$142.72  0.52%  
GBPUSD=X 
$1.23  0.07%  
EURNZD=X 
$1.67  -0.30%  
AUDUSD=X 
$0.6952  0.77%  
CADUSD=X 
$0.7757  0.81%