Filed under: International markets, Forecasts, Federal Reserve, Recession

Is the U.S. Federal Reserve about ready to pause its monetary-easing course, after next week’s widely-expected 25-basis-point cut?

The emerging consensus appears to be that the Fed will, both to allow the world’s most powerful central bank to assess the impact of its string of rate cuts over the past year and to save some ‘interest rate ammunition,’ should the U.S.’s anemic economy not show signs of a recovery in H2 2008.

If the Fed cuts key, short-term interest rates next Wednesday, it will be the Fed’s seventh cut in eight months. Reductions to-date have pared a whopping 300 basis points from the Fed Funds rate to 2.25% from 5.25% in September 2007.

Help from Europe?

Given that the slowdown has been U.S.-centric, and caused in large part by the end of the U.S.’s housing boom, economist David H. Wang initially thought the Fed would be left to its own devices to jump-start demand. However, in light of recent data indicating that both German and French business confidence had dropped in March 2008, Reuters reported Thursday, Wang is now inclined to think that the European Central Bank will not stand-pat on interest rates much longer. “We’re beginning to see the signs of a slowdown in Europe,” Wang said. “I think another month or so of poor data and the ECB will be compelled to cut, despite some inflation pressure.”

The ECB has kept its key, short-term rate, the refinance rate, at 4% throughout the Fed’s easing cycle. A start of an ECB easing, Wang said, will both stimulate demand from Europe and give the Fed a window to “take a breather” and assess the impact of both monetary and fiscal policy stimulus in the U.S.

Further, the downside from the ECB maintaining a hawkish stance amid a Fed pause is very large for Europe, Wang argued. If the ECB does nothing and Europe’s economy slows to a crawl, it will have missed valuable time to stimulate needed demand. Conversely, if the ECB cuts rates and later finds that growth remained adequate, it could always re-raise rates, “to keep the inflation genie back in the bottle,” he said.

Continue reading Is the Fed’s new monetary policy stance, ‘one and done’?

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