FOMC Meeting Recap: Powell Projects November Taper Announcement

 | Sep 23, 2021 12:06AM ET

As we noted in our FOMC preview report on Monday, the Federal Reserve was never likely to make any immediate changes to monetary policy at yesterday’s meeting, and that was before fears of Chinese property developer Evergrande collapsing under the weight of its massive debt load reached critical mass this week.

So it certainly wasn’t a surprise that Jerome Powell and company left interest rates and asset purchases unchanged at this week'’s meeting, but we certainly did get an elusive taper “hint.” In its statement, the central bank noted:

“If progress continues broadly as expected, the Committee judges that a moderation in the pace of asset purchases may soon be warranted.”

In a phrasing even the notoriously opaque Alan Greenspan would admire, Jerome Powell and company managed to meet the market’s expectations with a nod toward normalizing monetary policy in the near future… without necessarily committing to starting the process at its next meeting in November.

(…at least, in the official statement – more below!)

Beyond that there were three other key aspects of the meeting for hints about how monetary policy will evolve from here:

h2 1. The monetary policy statement/h2

Beyond the aforementioned taper hint, there was only one noteworthy tweak to the Fed’s monetary policy statement: The committee inserted a nod to the impact of COVID-19 cases slowing the recovery in certain sectors. Needless to say, this minor update was not a meaningful market mover.

h2 2. The summary of economic projections (SEP)/h2

Thankfully, the accompanying update to the FOMC’s quarterly economic projections was a bit more interesting. The closely-scrutinized “dot plot” of interest rate projections showed an even split between Fed officials (9) who see interest rate liftoff in 2022 and those who see it later than that (9, with 8 of those projecting the first interest rate hike in 2023).

Separately, the median Fed official also increased his or her projection in the following ways:

  • Real GDP growth now projected lower in 2021, higher in 2022 and moderately higher in 2023
  • Unemployment now projected higher in 2021 and lower in both 2022 and 2023
  • Core PCE inflation now projected higher in 2021, 2022, and 2023