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With Little Progress on Inflation, the Fed Presses Ahead on Inflation Fight

We continue to expect the Fed to pause its rate increases in early 2023.

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With yet another aggressive interest-rate increase, the Federal Reserve signaled its fight against inflation isn’t over.

As expected, the Fed announced on Wednesday that it was lifting the federal-funds rate by 0.75 percentage points. This makes for the fourth consecutive meeting with a rate hike of this size—three times the size of the 0.25-percentage-point increases usually seen in recent historical periods of monetary policy tightening. With today’s move, the fed-funds rate rises to a target range of 3.75%-4%, up from zero at the start of the year.

The Fed has been undeterred by calls by others to slow (or even pause) the pace of rate hikes. While rate hikes are beginning to have an effect on economic activity, progress on inflation has been woefully inadequate. The Consumer Price Index was up 8.2% year over year in September. In particular, core CPI inflation (which excludes food and energy prices) has remained stubbornly high. Core CPI has averaged 6% annualized growth in the past three months, holding more or less steady since the start of 2022.

As of Wednesday afternoon, U.S. Treasury yields are now about unchanged compared with a day ago. Therefore, the Fed’s commentary has not significantly changed the market’s expectations for the course of monetary policy. The Fed’s official press release did place new emphasis on “the lags with which monetary policy affects economic activity and inflation,” suggesting a more-dovish approach. On the other hand, chair Jerome Powell repeatedly stated that discussion around pausing rate hikes was highly premature at this stage.

Bond yields have been fairly flat in recent weeks, but have soared compared with the start of 2022. That has raised the cost of borrowing for consumers and businesses. The 30-year mortgage rate reached 7.08% last week—the highest level since 2002. The housing market is already registering a steep decline, and broader impact on economic activity is sure to follow.

A line chart showing U.S. treasury yields vs. the federal funds rate in the last 5-years.

Why We Expect Interest Rates to Fall

Ultimately, the path for the fed-funds rate (and other interest rates) will be contingent on the state of the economy. We expect normalizing inflation and slowing economic activity to clear the path for falling interest rates in 2023 and beyond. We project the Fed to cease hiking in January 2023, and then begin cutting the fed-funds rate by summer 2023. Our fed-funds rate projections are below those implied by the market, as we expect inflation to come down quicker than expected in the first half of 2023. We expect the fed-funds rate to peak at a range of 4.25%-4.5% in early 2023, whereas futures markets now imply a peak of 5%-5.25%.

A bar-line chart showing market federal funds rates vs. Morningstar's forecasts.

There is some risk that the Fed overtightens, and indeed based on our expectation that inflation hits 1.4% in 2024, the Fed is exceeding what needs to be done to bring inflation back to 2%. But we agree with Powell’s statement that prudent risk management calls for erring on the side of higher rates. If rates become too high, the Fed can always pivot in order to shore up economic activity. If rates are too low, then inflation risks becoming entrenched, which will ultimately raise the costs (in terms of lost jobs and economic activity) of restoring inflation back to normal.

In the long-run, however, interest rates are likely to subside regardless of the Fed’s tactical decision-making. Long-term forces (demographics and others) have acted to push down interest rates for decades, and those forces haven’t gone away. We expect a 10-year Treasury yield of 2.75% in 2026 and after, compared with 4.1% today.

A line chart showcasing both historical and Morningstar's future expectations for interest rates.

The author or authors do not own shares in any securities mentioned in this article. Find out about Morningstar’s editorial policies.

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