Monetary Policy & Inflation | US
Summary
- With the Fed jacking up interest rates to dampen demand and cool stubbornly high inflation, financial conditions have been tightening.
- However, the US economy shows little sign of growing below trend so far.
- The Fed could be struggling because the complex links between financial and real economies are loosening.
Market Implications
- The Fed may need to hike much more than the market expects for financial conditions to tighten sufficiently to slow growth. We expect an 8% peak.
- Longer term, the Fed may be unable to slow the US economy without triggering financial instability.
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Summary
- With the Fed jacking up interest rates to dampen demand and cool stubbornly high inflation, financial conditions have been tightening.
- However, the US economy shows little sign of growing below trend so far.
- The Fed could be struggling because the complex links between financial and real economies are loosening.
Market Implications
- The Fed may need to hike much more than the market expects for financial conditions to tighten sufficiently to slow growth. We expect an 8% peak.
- Longer term, the Fed may be unable to slow the US economy without triggering financial instability.
The Fed Has Been Pumping the Brakes to Little Effect
With inflation at 8.3%, the Fed has embarked on its fastest, most aggressive hiking cycle since 1982. After 225bp of hikes in six months, the federal funds rate (FFR) now stands at 3%. By tightening financial conditions, the Fed aims to lower demand in line with supply, cooling price pressures. But the problem is, tighter financial conditions are failing to slow the economy. Nonfarm payrolls – a good indicator of activity – have barely slowed (Chart 1).
Why Is the Economy Not Slowing?
One reason could be the famous ‘long and variable lags’ with which monetary policy gets transmitted to the economy. Alternatively, it could be because financial conditions impact the real economy less than people think. We believe it is the latter.
How Financial Conditions Affect the Economy
Since Ben Bernanke and Mark Gertler’s seminal 1995 article, central banks have assumed monetary policy gets transmitted to the real economy through financial conditions.
Many indices attempt to measure financial conditions. One of the most well-known is Goldman Sachs’ (GS) index. It is based on the FFR, 10yr yields, a trade-weighted dollar index, and equity prices relative to 10yr average EPS.
Per Bernanke and Gertler, you would expect changes in FCIs to lead to changes in the economy. However, FCIs are poor leading indicators of recession (Chart 2). FCIs tightened ahead of the 2001 recession, but not the 1991 and 2008 recessions. In the 2001 recession, FCIs peaked after the recession. And FCIs tightened in 2014-15 without a recession.
(Note: The GS index is unequally weighted, so I built an equally weighted one for comparison due to the debate on the subject.)
They are also coincident, not leading, indicators of growth (Chart 3). Basically, as the US economy has become more financialized, the correlation between FCIs and growth has increased.
I am not saying financial conditions do not impact growth. Rather, the links between the financial sector and economy appear to me too complex for a single number derived from historical relationships to describe.
Financial developments impact the real economy through three broad channels:
- Wealth effect: when households feel wealthier, they tend to spend more (and vice versa).
- Funding cost and availability: stronger balance sheets make it easier for businesses and household to borrow and banks to lend.
- Dollar strength: a strong dollar tends to make for a lower trade balance and less business investment.
Why Financial Conditions Are Translating Less to the Real Economy
If we analyse those channels today, we find the reasons the Fed is having such a hard time:
- The wealth effect from falling asset prices will likely be small due to strong household balance sheets, so spending will persist.
- Households and corporates have locked in long-term, low interest rates, so Fed rate hikes impact funding cost and availability more slowly.
- Ongoing structural changes, mainly an increase in long-term consumer durables demand and corporate reshoring, could have lowered the interest elasticity of aggregate demand.
Strong Households Balance Sheets to Limit Wealth Effect
In Q2 2022, household net worth fell to 7.9 times disposable income, from 8.2 times in Q1. Yet the household savings rate fell further. Household net worth will likely keep falling as markets continue to price a more aggressive Fed and residential real estate prices soften. However, this is unlikely to lead to a marked increase in the savings rate because:
- Net worth remains historically high.
- Since the GFC, savings have decoupled from net worth.
Households are now exiting over a decade of deleveraging and face no deleveraging pressure. Instead, fast-increasing household debt suggests the savings rate is falling further.
Household Spending Is Less Interest Sensitive
Meanwhile, higher funding costs will likely impact household spending little.
First, after four decades of falling yields, households have locked in low funding rates. Despite a higher FFR and higher rents, in Q2, the ratios of household debt service and financial obligation (debt service plus rent, auto lease, owner insurance and property tax) to disposable income were still well below pre-pandemic levels.
A big factor keeping these ratios low is that mortgages, which comprise about 80% of US household debt, have fixed rates and very long maturities, typically 30 years.
Second, banks are yet to pass FFR hikes on to consumer rates (Chart 5).
Third, structural economic changes are limiting the impact of higher funding costs. Besides residential real estate, the other interest-sensitive component of household demand is demand for consumer durables, e.g., cars, that are typically funded by credit. Yet the pandemic has led to a structural increase in the demand for durables, which could reduce their interest sensitivity.
Reshoring and Domestic Market Support Business Spending
Like households, businesses will likely be insulated from tighter financial conditions. First, although businesses have been levering up, like households, they have locked in low, long-term funding costs.
Second, raw material prices tend to be negatively correlated to the dollar (Chart 6). A strong dollar therefore tends to lower corporates’ input costs.
Third, the US is much more domestically driven than other economies and therefore less exposed to a global slowdown. Like the euro area, it benefits from a large domestic market. But external trade accounts for only about 30% of the economy, contrasting the euro area’s 100%. Also, the US has a current account deficit while the euro area has traditionally had a current account surplus.
Fourth, and most importantly, the US is benefitting from reshoring. Due to supply chain disruptions, growing geopolitical risk and government intervention, US manufacturers have been investing more at home and less abroad.
Market Consequences
In the mid-2000s, banks and households were overextended. Fed tightening therefore had devastating consequences.
Now, however, banks and households have strong balance sheets, and ongoing structural changes could have reduced the interest sensitivity of demand.
Consequently, the Fed may have to tighten policy by much more than the market is pricing to lower demand in line with supply. That is why, despite growing risks of recession outside the US and consequently of a stronger dollar, I continue to expect a terminal FFR near 8%.
A longer-run consequence could be that the Fed cannot slow demand significantly without triggering financial instability. The US has experienced over a decade of ultra-loose monetary policy. So the necessary strong policy tightening will probably unearth financial imbalances.
Dominique Dwor-Frecaut is a macro strategist based in Southern California. She has worked on EM and DMs at hedge funds, on the sell side, the NY Fed , the IMF and the World Bank. She publishes the blog Macro Sis that discusses the drivers of macro returns.
(The commentary contained in the above article does not constitute an offer or a solicitation, or a recommendation to implement or liquidate an investment or to carry out any other transaction. It should not be used as a basis for any investment decision or other decision. Any investment decision should be based on appropriate professional advice specific to your needs.)