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BLOG — Nov 14, 2022
By Akshat Goel, Ben Herzon, Ken Matheny, and Lawrence Nelson
The better-than-expected Consumer Price Index report for October supports a downshift in the pace of Fed rate hikes in December.
Even before that report, the Federal Reserve was poised to slow from super-sized increases of 75 basis points at each of the last four policy meetings to a still large increase of 50 basis points at the upcoming policy meeting on Dec. 14.
A downshift is consistent with recent Fed communication, including the Federal Open Market Committee statement issued on Nov. 2, Chair Powell's press conference on the same date, and comments from individual policymakers. Those communications highlight the need to adhere to a data-dependent, meeting-by-meeting approach that would allow more opportunity to assess the cumulative impacts of Fed rate hikes and lower the risk of over-tightening policy.
To that point, the report on the CPI contained hints — and we stress only hints — that inflation may be easing, although it still is very high. On a 12-month basis, overall CPI inflation was 7.7% in October and core CPI inflation was 6.3%. Based on details in the CPI that inform the Fed's preferred inflation gauges within personal consumption expenditures (PCE), we estimate that the core PCE price index rose 0.3% in October, which would be the smallest increase in 3 months, while its 12-month change eased slightly to 5.0%.
This is still far above the Fed's 2% target, and it will keep the Fed on course to continue to tighten into a substantially restrictive stance. Nevertheless, the modest easing in inflation that occurred in October will reinforce the argument that it is appropriate to moderate the pace of rate hikes. We expect a Fed rate hike of 50 basis points in December, followed by a pair of quarter-point rate hikes in February and March. These increases would bring the target for the federal funds rate to a peak range of 4¾% to 5%, where we expect it to remain for some time until inflation falls close to 2% on a sustained basis.
Recession expectations
We expect the US economy will weaken and tip into a modest recession around the end of this year. We expect a cumulative decline in GDP through the second quarter of next year of just 0.7%, which would be one of the mildest recessions in recent decades. The tightening of financial conditions since last year has already pushed spending on home construction into recession and has undermined strength in other areas of private demand, including nonresidential structures investment and PCE.
We expect GDP to post a modest annualized decline in the fourth quarter of ‑0.3% — although volatile data on inventories and net exports could result in a higher or lower figure. By year, we expect GDP to be flat (0.0%) on a four-quarter change basis in both 2022 and 2023, followed by an increase of 1.6% in 2024. Labor demand will soften and push the unemployment rate up to 5.7% next year.
This week's economic releases:
This article was published by S&P Global Market Intelligence and not by S&P Global Ratings, which is a separately managed division of S&P Global.