Fed Weighs Stubborn Inflation Against Banking System Stress

At its March meeting, the Federal Reserve hiked its policy rate by 25 basis points (bps) while signaling a more cautious outlook as officials grapple with recent banking sector stress amid still elevated inflation. Indeed, the Fed statement admitted that “Recent developments are likely to result in tighter credit conditions for households and businesses and to weigh on economic activity, hiring, and inflation.” Fed officials also signaled that they could possibly be on hold after this hike, stating that some additional policy firming “may” be appropriate, instead of “will” be appropriate as they said in the previous statement in February.

To raise interest rates while also signaling increased caution on the outlook reflects the Fed’s ongoing balancing act. On the one hand, the central bankers seek to manage inflation expectations by emphasizing their continued resolve to fight inflation, but on the other hand they must acknowledge that recession risks have increased as tight financial conditions and banking sector stress hinder the economy.

On net, we believe the stress in the banking sector will work to slow economic activity, demand, and eventually inflation, resulting in the Fed needing to do less to sufficiently tighten financial conditions. As a result, the Fed has likely moved closer to the end of the hiking cycle. However, we note that holding policy at restrictive levels is different from starting the process to normalize or even ease policy. Indeed, the timing and speed of any rate-cutting cycle will depend on how inflation and financial stability risks evolve over time.