FOMC preview: Inflationary pressures tempt taper talk

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The Federal Reserve had hoped for a string of strong jobs reports showing a pace of 1 million monthly job gains.

Instead, the Fed received larger-than-expected readings on inflation.

For a central bank that has reiterated its higher bar for pulling its monetary stimulus, recent data points could test the resolve of policymakers with regard to its quantitative easing program.

Since the Fed’s last policy-setting meeting in May, several Fed officials voiced interest in taking the first step toward slowing the central bank’s $120 billion-a-month pace of U.S. Treasury and agency mortgage-backed securities purchases.

“There is some upside risk to increased inflation,” Philadelphia Fed President Patrick Harker said on June 2.

The Consumer Price Index in May rose by the fastest year-over-year pace since August 2008. Another measure of inflation, the Producer Price Index, recorded its fastest 12-month growth on record since the Bureau of Labor Statistics began the dataset in November 2010.

Still, many Fed officials insist that the high data readings are due to temporary factors like supply chain bottlenecks. Shortages in microchips are continuing to put upward pressure on cars. But lumber prices, which skyrocketed in the late spring, are now tumbling.

“I continue to believe as my baseline case that this will prove to be largely transitory,” Fed Vice Chairman Richard Clarida told Yahoo Finance on May 25 (before the May CPI and PPI prints).

Fed watchers expect that “transitory” will remain the prevailing view among the Federal Open Market Committee, meaning that those eager to talk about tapering may be in the minority this week.

A BofA survey done last week noted that 63% of global fund managers do not expect the Fed to signal tapering until August or September — most likely at the Fed’s late-August meeting in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.

A BofA survey conducted between June 4-10, 2021 notes that most fund managers do not expect the Fed to signal a taper in this week's meeting. Source: BofA Fund Manager Survey, DataStream
A BofA survey conducted between June 4-10, 2021 notes that most fund managers do not expect the Fed to signal a taper in this week's meeting. Source: BofA Fund Manager Survey, DataStream · BofA Fund Manager Survey, DataStream

“This is not a Fed that is rushing to the exits,” BofA Global Research analysts wrote on June 14. “That said, we expect a few nuanced changes that would sound less dovish than in the April meeting.”

The Fed is continuing to keep a focus on the labor market, where May jobs data showed the economy still 7.6 million jobs short of pre-pandemic levels.

When is a rate hike coming?

Commentary on the Fed’s asset purchases could come from the FOMC policy statement or Fed Chairman Jerome Powell’s press conference at 2:30 p.m. ET on Wednesday.

The FOMC’s next round of economic projections, due alongside the policy statement, could also offer some clues.

Those projections will include an update to the so-called “dot plots,” which map out each FOMC member’s forecasts for where interest rates may head in the future. The Fed’s last round of projections in March had the median member of the committee projecting no rate hike through the end of 2023.