Fed lifts interest rates another quarter point despite major bank distress
Chair Jerome Powell speaks at Fed's post-meeting press conference
Chip Somodevilla / Staff / Getty Images

The Federal Reserve on Wednesday lifted interest rates by a quarter of a percentage point, staying focused on inflation and tuning out fears that higher borrowing costs may perpetuate turbulence for more banks.

Policymakers on the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) elected to raise their key benchmark interest rate to a new target range of 4.75-5 percent, the highest in more than a decade. The move is bound to keep lifting interest rates on deposits at banks while also nudging up borrowing costs on key consumer loans, such as home equity lines of credit (HELOCs) and credit cards.

The decision was unusually difficult to predict. Up until two weeks ago, Fed Chair Jerome Powell had cautioned Fed watchers that the U.S. central bank was willing to speed up how much it is hiking interest rates for the third time this tightening cycle. A key inflation report showed prices weren’t slowing as fast as they were previously, while costs outside of the volatile food and energy categories were instead heating up.

Then Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank collapsed. Both banks failed for reasons unlike the 2008 financial crisis, likely related to their undiversified depositor base that had a substantial amount of uninsured funds. Yet, it did lead to more bets that the Fed would either be willing to hike by the smaller quarter-point amount — if not hit the pause button altogether — given the financial instability both bank failures sparked.

U.S. central bankers acknowledged the negative effects a banking crisis could have on the economy and struck a mention in its post-meeting statement that “ongoing increases” will be appropriate to nix inflation. The median forecast among officials, however, showed just one more rate hike for 2023, despite projections for hotter inflation and a lower unemployment rate.

“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 wrote in the statement. “The extent of these effects is uncertain.”

The Fed’s rapid rate hikes last year likely contributed to part of the mess, while concerns are also growing that the U.S. central bank failed in its duties as the most important overseer over U.S. banks. Monetary policy can take more than a year to filter through the financial system. The ultimate concern is that more could keep going wrong, as the U.S. financial system starts to catch up to the massive rate hikes the Fed approved last year.

“Not even the second and third largest bank failures in U.S. history, or the resulting instability in U.S. and global banking, can keep the Fed from a ninth consecutive interest rate hike to corral inflation,” says Greg McBride, CFA, Bankrate chief financial analyst. “If the financial system remains stable, this likely isn’t the last rate hike. Only one Fed participant sees rates holding here.”