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The Fed’s next test

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Mar 29, 2024 View in browser
 
POLITICO Morning Money

By Zachary Warmbrodt

Presented by

Electronic Payments Coalition

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QUICK FIX

The Federal Reserve delighted markets last week by signaling it will stay the course with interest rate cuts this year. The ensuing batch of economic indicators is starting to challenge that reassuring confidence.

The biggie could be this morning’s release of the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, the PCE price index minus food and energy costs. Per a Bloomberg survey, it’s expected to show a 0.3 percent month-to-month increase for February, following a January uptick that was the largest in a year.

It comes on top of other data points from the last few days that may give the Fed pause as it decides when to cut rates. The indicators continue to show that the economy is performing more strongly than expected, despite higher borrowing costs.

“I see economic output and the labor market showing continued strength, while progress in reducing inflation has slowed,” Fed Governor Christopher Waller told the Economic Club of New York on Wednesday. “Because of these signs, I see no rush in taking the step of beginning to ease monetary policy.”

Ahead of Friday’s inflation report, the week’s big economic data release was the Commerce Department’s final read on gross domestic product for the fourth quarter. At 3.4 percent, it came in higher than the government’s previous estimate, showing that economic output grew even faster at the end of last year.

Commerce also said gross domestic income, an alternate benchmark that tallies earned income and costs rather than GDP’s value of goods and services produced, surged by 4.8 percent, the highest rate since the end of 2021.

While GDP and GDI are backward-looking, more recent evidence also raises questions about whether the Fed needs to relax rates soon.

Financial markets have been soaring, with stocks and bitcoin hitting new records this year. The S&P 500 is having its best first quarter since 2019. The increases have been driven in part by the Fed halting its rate-hike campaign and pivoting to potential cuts.

As for the persistently strong labor market, data out Thursday showed that jobless claims last week fell by 2,000 to 210,000. The four-week moving average also fell. An increase in jobless claims would be a sign of economic slowdown.

Apollo chief economist Torsten Slok flags a growing tension for the Fed: The “long and variable lags” of the Fed’s rate hikes — moves made to slow the economy enough to tame inflation — have been overwhelmed by the surge in the S&P 500 since November. He cites strong employment growth in January and February, low jobless claims and upward inflation pressure.

“The bottom line is that the last mile is harder because of the immediate positive impact on the economy of record-high stock prices,” Slok wrote Tuesday.

Other economists — and some Fed officials themselves — cite evidence that indicates the economy is getting to the point where interest rates may need to be dialed back.

RSM US chief economist Joe Brusuelas wrote Thursday that his firm’s take on the Taylor Rule — a kind of economic equation designed to help guide rate cut decisions — implies that the Fed should start easing in the near term. At stake, according to Brusuelas, is a potential tip toward higher unemployment and sub-trend growth.

It underscores concerns that a Fed decision to keep rates at current levels will have an outsize negative impact on the economy as inflation recedes, with inflation-adjusted “real” interest rates rising.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell said last week that central bank officials believe that, overall, financial conditions are ultimately weighing on economic activity. He cited signs in the labor market that demand is “cooling off a little bit from the extremely high levels.”

“That's been a question for a while,” he said. “We did see progress on inflation last year, significant progress, despite financial conditions sometimes being tighter, sometimes looser.”

What does Powell think now? He’s scheduled to update us on his outlook later this morning, when he appears at a San Francisco Fed conference.

Happy Friday — Send tips to zwarmbrodt@politico.com.

 

A message from Electronic Payments Coalition:

CRS: NO EVIDENCE THAT DURBIN-MARSHALL CREDIT CARD BILL WOULD HELP CONSUMERS OR SMALL BUSINESSES The independent Congressional Research Service (CRS) is the latest organization to release a report questioning whether the Durbin-Marshall Credit Card Bill would help consumers or small businesses. CRS echoed an earlier report by the Richmond Fed noting that consumers failed to see any meaningful cost savings because of similar legislation imposing routing mandates and price caps on debit card interchange. Learn more HERE.

 
Driving the day

U.S. markets are closed for Good Friday … February PCE data is out at 8:30 a.m. … Powell speaks as part of a moderated discussion with Kai Ryssdal at a San Francisco Fed conference at 11:30 a.m.

Judge boots credit card case — A Trump-picked judge agitated by banking industry lawyers sided with the CFPB in a stunning move Thursday. As Michael Stratford reports, District Judge Mark Pittman in Fort Worth transferred a U.S. Chamber of Commerce-led legal challenge against the bureau to federal court in Washington. At issue in the case is an attempt by the Chamber, the American Bankers Association and other business groups to block a CFPB rule capping credit card late fees.

Pittman supported the CFPB’s argument that the case had little connection to Fort Worth. The consumer bureau alleged that the groups were “venue shopping,” a legal strategy by plaintiffs to get cases in front of friendly judges. Pittman had already warned that his court was being stretched thin by an influx of cases.

“Venue is not a continental breakfast; you cannot pick and choose on a plaintiffs’ whim where and how a lawsuit is filed,” Pittman wrote in his decision.

The business groups are also challenging the rule in the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans.

No remorse — A federal judge sentenced former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried to 25 years in prison for stealing billions of dollars from crypto traders, Declan Harty reports. Judge Lewis Kaplan said Thursday that Bankman-Fried never offered "a word of remorse for commission of terrible crimes."

Take heed, crypto titans. Attorney General Merrick Garland warned in a statement: “Anyone who believes they can hide their financial crimes behind wealth and power, or behind a shiny new thing they claim no one else is smart enough to understand, should think twice.”

White House targets rent hikes — Katy O’Donnell reports that the Biden administration next week will impose a 10 percent limit on annual rent increases at properties supported by the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit. It's part of a broader White House effort to lower the cost of housing after prices skyrocketed during the pandemic.

Insurers urged to pay after bridge collapse — The head of the Lloyd’s of London insurance market says insurers should “just get on with it” and payout for the Key bridge disaster, rather than wrangling over liability. The insurance industry is expecting billions of dollars in claims, including for repairing the bridge and covering business interruption.

In Congress, lawmakers are beginning to clash over using new federal money to rebuild the bridge. Rep. Dan Meuser (R-Pa.) in a Fox Business interview criticized President Joe Biden for saying Washington would pay the full cost.

"This is a crisis situation, but it needs a plan, not a knee-jerk spend reaction,” said Meuser, a member of House Financial Services.

 

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On the Hill

Warren, guns and money — Jasper Goodman reports that more than 30 Democratic lawmakers are calling on Treasury and financial regulators to require banks and payment networks to implement a merchant code specific to firearm retailers.

The lawmakers, led by Sen. Elizabeth Warren and Rep. Madeleine Dean, told the agencies in a letter that it would help "combat gun violence by detecting and deterring suspicious firearm purchases." An international body approved the creation of a merchant code for gun retailers in 2022, but payment companies have backed off amid Republican-led opposition in some states.

First in MM: GOP targets credit card rule — Rep. Andy Barr will introduce a resolution today that would block the aforementioned CFPB rule capping credit card late fees, Eleanor Mueller reports.

Barr, a senior House Financial Services Republican, is targeting the regulation as the banking industry sues to stop it in court. Barr’s legislation has no chance of becoming law but could draw out more political opposition in Congress. Sen. Tim Scott, the top Republican on Senate Banking, plans to introduce a companion.

One complication: Rep. Andy Ogles, a Tennessee Republican, introduced a similar bill Tuesday without the go-ahead from House Financial Services leadership, according to two Hill aides granted anonymity. The committee plans to proceed with Barr's instead. Ogles did not respond to a request for comment.

 

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Crypto

Russia and Tether — Bloomberg reports that the U.S. and UK are scrutinizing more than $20 billion in crypto transactions that passed through a Russia-based exchange, as part of an effort to crack down on sanctions evasion. The payments involve transactions in Tether, the world’s largest stablecoin.

 

Access New York bill updates and Congressional activity in areas that matter to you, and use our exclusive insights to see what’s on the Albany agenda. Learn more.

 
 
Climate

EPA gears up ‘green bank’ — Our E&E colleagues report that the EPA is close to announcing the nonprofits that will be tasked with distributing $20 billion to help finance clean energy projects. The awardees are expected to come under scrutiny from Republican lawmakers who want to gut the program.

 

A message from Electronic Payments Coalition:

CRS QUESTIONS WHETHER DURBIN-MARSHALL CREDIT CARD BILL WOULD HELP ANYONE AT ALL Every member of Congress should read the CRS analysis which discusses the impact the Durbin-Marshall Credit Card Bill could have on small businesses and American families. Report after report has plainly demonstrated that consumers and small businesses did NOT save any money when Congress passed the 2010 Durbin Amendment, imposing new mandates on debit cards. Now, a decade later, why would anyone assume a monumental restructuring of our nation’s secure, worry-free credit card system would yield different results? After considering the facts, the only logical solution would be to strongly OPPOSE the Durbin-Marshall Credit Card Bill. Click HERE to learn more.

 
 

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