U.S. may be on 'cusp' of inflation slowdown, Fed's Bostic tells CNBC

Reuters

Published Feb 09, 2022 08:44AM ET

Updated Feb 09, 2022 09:31AM ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. economy may be nearing a turn lower in inflation, Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic said on Wednesday, though he added he is still leaning towards a slightly faster pace of interest rate increases this year.

"I am very hopeful we are going to start to see that decline ... There is some evidence we are on the cusp of that," Bostic said in an interview on CNBC.

While Bostic still expects just three quarter-percentage-point rate increases will be appropriate this year, he said: "I am leaning a little towards four. We are going to have to see how the economy responds as we take our first steps," with an initial rate increase expected in March.

New inflation data on Thursday is expected to show the consumer price index continued to rise at an annualized pace of more than 7% in January - a high stretching back decades and reminiscent of the inflation shocks of the 1970s and 1980s. That has pushed the Fed to accelerate plans to raise rates and reduce its holdings of government bonds and mortgage-backed securities.

Bostic said more important to him than the high headline inflation number is whether the month-to-month pace of change continues to moderate, a sign the economy may be working through the supply-chain problems and other difficulties that have been driving prices higher but are associated with the bumpy reopening from the coronavirus pandemic.