Does Anyone Really Believe 0.5% Rate Hikes Will Curb U.S. Inflation?

 | May 26, 2022 08:08AM ET

0.5% rate hikes in June and July are likely settled. However, with inflation at 8%+, calming prices with such little action is completely unrealistic.

While investors continue their countdown until the Fed pivots and resumes QE, in some alternative reality, it's perceived as bullish for risk assets. Sure, the short-term sugar high of more free money should uplift sentiment. However, I've noted on numerous occasions that the long-term consequences would be dire.

Thus, while investors await a superhero that's unlikely to arrive, the ramifications of unanchored inflation should prove troublesome over the medium term. To explain, the FOMC released the minutes from its May 3-4 monetary policy meeting on May 25. The report revealed:

“Participants judged that it was important to move expeditiously to a more neutral monetary policy stance. They also noted that a restrictive stance of policy may well become appropriate depending on the evolving economic outlook and the risks to the outlook.”

In addition:

“Participants observed that inflation continued to run well above the Committee's longer-run goal and that inflation pressures were evident in a broad array of goods and services. Various participants remarked on the hardship caused by elevated inflation and heightened inflation uncertainty – including eroding American families' real incomes and wealth and making it more difficult for businesses to make production and investment plans. They also pointed out that high inflation could impede the achievement of maximum employment on a sustained basis.”

As a result, 50 basis point rate hikes are now the consensus for “the next couple of meetings.”

Please see below: