Fed Accelerates Rate Hike and Taper Game Plan

December, 15, 2021

On Wednesday, the Federal Reserve responded to stubborn inflation pressures in the US economy by doubling the pace at which it’s tapering its QE purchases. It also ramped up the number of rate hikes it expects will be needed to bring the economy back into equilibrium in the medium term.

Neither development particularly surprised markets, but this shouldn’t obscure the magnitude of the changes compared with expectations only a few weeks ago. Instead of a fixed, gradual taper ending in mid-2022, we now have an accelerating, rapid purchase reduction wrapping up in March. Rather than debating whether to raise rates in late 2022 or early 2023, the Fed will now debate a rate hike within the next three months.

A Big Change in the Fed’s View on COVID-19 Impact

Those are big changes reflecting a big change in the Fed’s view of COVID-19’s likely impact on the US economy. A year ago, the Fed and most forecasters, AB included, saw the pandemic as primarily a demand shock that would probably impair growth.

Now, however, COVID-19 seems primarily a supply shock that instead is pushing inflation higher. Because risk management is the name of the game for monetary policy, that change in risk outlook warrants a change in the policy stance. That’s exactly what the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) has moved toward over the last few months—and emphasized today.

Rate Hikes Soon…but Not Necessarily an Aggressive Cycle

We expect the Fed to raise rates for the first time in March 2022, following with hikes in June and September before pausing in late 2022. The FOMC is trying to manage the risk of higher inflation lasting into the second half of next year. Because monetary policy works with a lag, a Fed worried about persistent inflation into the second half of 2022 needs to raise rates earlier, not later.