U.S. Federal Reserve Doubles Down On “Hawkish Pivot”

 | Jan 30, 2022 05:28AM ET

The US Federal Reserve (Fed) continues to drive the economic agenda, setting the tone for monetary developments globally. In September 2021, after more than a year of extraordinary measures to support the economy following the pandemic shock, the Fed officially announced the start of its monetary policy “normalization” plan.

Back then, the Fed announced a gradual reduction or “taper” of its USD 120 billion per month long-term of asset purchases (otherwise known as quantitative easing or QE). The expectation was that net asset purchases from the Fed would reach zero by mid-2022, completing the so-called taper process.

In December 2021, however, as inflation accelerated further, the Fed started a “hawkish pivot,” communicating that elevated price pressures could justify ending QE sooner than planned.

In fact, the US core personal consumption expenditures price index (PCE), the Fed's favorite gauge for inflation, spiked 4.7% y/y in December 2021; again well above the 2% policy target.

h2 US inflation (core PCE, %, y/y)/h2