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WASHINGTON, Feb 16 (Reuters) – Federal Reserve officials last month agreed that, with inflation tightening its grip on the economy and employment strong, it was time to raise interest rates, but also that any decisions would depend on a meeting-by-meeting analysis of inflation and other data, according to the minutes of the Jan. 25-26 policy meeting.
The account of the two-day session showed the U.S. central bank readying for a fight against the fastest pace of price increases since the 1980s, with officials saying that while they still expected inflation to ease through the year they would be ready to hike rates fast if it does not.
“Most participants noted that, if inflation does not move down as they expect, it would be appropriate for the (Federal Open Market) Committee to remove policy accommodation at a faster pace than they currently anticipate,” the minutes stated.
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As it stood, Fed officials said the strength of the economy and the high current pace of inflation would warrant raising rates quicker than the once-per-quarter pace seen during the tightening cycle that began in 2015 – a statement some analysts said perhaps points to rate hikes at every meeting this year.
The Fed meets eight times per year, or roughly every six to seven weeks.
But, with the United States still near a peak in coronavirus infections when the last policy meeting was held, the minutes gave no obvious indication policymakers were wed to a particular path – and, especially, no sense they would start the liftoff in borrowing costs at their upcoming meeting in March with a half-percentage-point rise in the benchmark overnight interest rate.
The Fed in recent years has stuck with smaller and usually well-anticipated quarter-percentage-point increases.
Among the Fed officials who have made public comments about monetary policy since the January meeting, most have favored a smaller initial increase, including two who spoke on Wednesday.
Even though surprised by the persistence of inflation, “participants emphasized that the appropriate path of policy would depend on economic and financial developments and their implications for the outlook and the risks around the outlook,” the minutes stated.
Fed officials “will be updating their assessments of the appropriate setting for the policy stance at each meeting.”
Bond yields fell and stocks on balance moved higher after the release of the minutes. The yield on the 2-year Treasury note , the maturity generally most sensitive to Fed interest rate expectations, slid to 1.52% from 1.55% and the S&P 500 index (.SPX) rose into positive territory on the day.
BALANCE SHEET DEBATE
Following the January policy meeting Fed officials issued a statement saying that it would “soon be appropriate” to raise the central bank’s benchmark overnight interest rate from its near-zero level.
Data since the beginning of this year have, if anything, heightened the Fed’s readiness to act. U.S. retail sales in January were strong, and U.S. employers added 467,000 jobs that month, far more than expected. The most recent inflation data showed no sign of easing from the current 40-year high.
But policymakers have not committed to much beyond the notion that they will increase rates at their March 15-16 policy meeting and will likely continue to raise rates through the year – depending on how inflation responds.
Investors had begun pricing in the prospect that the Fed would raise its target interest rate by half a percentage point next month, but they now see a quarter-percentage-point hike as more likely.
“While the minutes of the late-January FOMC meeting pre-date the release of the stronger-than-expected labour market and inflation data covering last month, officials didn’t appear to be seriously considering either a 50bp rate hike to start the tightening cycle or a hike at each of the remaining seven policy meetings this year,” said Paul Ashworth, chief North America economist at Capital Economics.
The Fed in January also released a broad set of guidelines about how it plans to reduce the nearly $9 trillion portfolio of securities held by the central bank.
Discussion of the balance sheet included debate about whether or not outright sales of securities will be needed, the minutes stated. Though no decision has been made, the minutes noted that “many” participants in the meeting said sales may be needed at some point in the future.
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Reporting by Howard Schneider
Editing by Paul Simao
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.