After two years of smooth sailing, Fed ready to navigate rocky bond market, Trump uncertainty

17 hours ago

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By Howard Schneider

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - After two years of progress on inflation and surprisingly persistent economic growth, the Federal Reserve next week meets with one eye on new Trump administration policies and another on a bond market that has ratcheted up borrowing costs even as U.S. central bankers have been cutting interest rates.

Both pose potential challenges in an economy where inflation has edged slowly closer to the Fed's 2% target without the recession and large rise in unemployment that some central bank officials felt would be needed for price pressures to ebb.

The unemployment rate instead fell as low as 3.4% and ended 2024 at 4.1%, close to what many economists think the economy can support without reigniting price pressures; inflation has declined to perhaps just half a percentage point from the Fed's target. Companies added more than a quarter of a million jobs in December.

That so-far easy landing from the 2022 pandemic-era spike in prices, and the aggressive rate hikes that were delivered to tame it, could face fresh challenges in the coming months, with potentially significant shifts in U.S. international trade, immigration and other policies, and bond investors pushing up yields on U.S. government debt and basic consumer loans like home mortgages.

"The bond market feels incredibly fragile," with rates rising roughly a full percentage point in recent months and the average rate on 30-year fixed-rate mortgages again hitting 7%, Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics, said in an economic outlook seminar at the Travelers Institute last week.

While yields on a 10-year U.S. Treasury note in the mid-4% range may be normal historically, "I do think there's a meaningful risk that we could see much higher long-term interest rates," Zandi said.

'CAUTIOUS' APPROACH

The Fed is expected to hold its benchmark interest rate steady in the current 4.25%-4.50% range at its next policy meeting on Jan. 28-29, after reducing it by a full percentage point since September.

While the central bank's monetary policy statement may see little if any change, Fed Chair Jerome Powell in his post-meeting press conference will be able to set the tone for the months ahead.

Indeed, the uncertainty ahead was in full display on Monday as President Donald Trump was sworn in for a second term in the White House. He promptly followed through on some campaign pledges - issuing orders on border security and energy policy, for instance - but opted against the immediate imposition of import tariffs, an unexpected development that unleashed a slide in the dollar and a rally in global stock markets on a day when U.S. financial markets were closed.


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