The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (2024)

Markets

DOW

S&P 500

NASDAQ

Fear & Greed Index

----- is driving the US market

Latest Market News

Portable hotspots arrive in Maui to bring internet to residents and tourists
X is ‘close to breakeven’ says CEO Linda Yaccarino
Why cell phone service is down in Maui — and when it could be restored

Something isn't loading properly. Please check back later.

Ad Feedback

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (2)

Analysis by Allison Morrow, CNN Business

Updated 3:55 PM EDT, Thu October 13, 2022

Ad Feedback

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (3)

Video Ad Feedback

Video: Elon Musk's Twitter flip, Kim Kardashian pays up, and the internet is on the Supreme Court's docket

14:32 - Source: CNN Business

Nightcap episodes 28 videos

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (4)

Video Ad Feedback

Video: Elon Musk's Twitter flip, Kim Kardashian pays up, and the internet is on the Supreme Court's docket

14:32

Now playing

- Source: CNN Business

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (5)

Video Ad Feedback

Airfares are falling, who's winning the work-from-home war, and the buzz over 'Barbie'

14:14

Now playing

- Source: CNN

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (6)

Video Ad Feedback

How to tell if you're the office jerk and book Beyoncé or Flo Rida for your next party

13:08

Now playing

- Source: CNN

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (7)

Video Ad Feedback

Reddit users revolt and why changing jobs is so scary

14:11

Now playing

- Source: CNN

Video Ad Feedback

The SEC comes for the crypto bros and the backlash over the PGA Tour-LIV Golf deal

15:12

Now playing

- Source: CNN

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (9)

Video Ad Feedback

Why Americans don't take all their vacation days and how not to get hacked

15:00

Now playing

- Source: CNN

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (10)

Video Ad Feedback

Are worker walkouts next in the work-from-home battle? Will ESPN's streaming plans destroy cable? And is corporate greed to blame for high prices?

14:12

Now playing

- Source: CNN Business

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (11)

Video Ad Feedback

Can a new CEO fix Twitter? Will AI be the atomic bomb or the printing press? And should you trade your data for a free TV?

13:58

Now playing

- Source: CNN Business

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (12)

Video Ad Feedback

Will Hollywood's killer robots become reality and can the diet industry survive Ozempic?

14:47

Now playing

- Source: CNN Business

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (13)

Video Ad Feedback

Will AI write the next Hollywood blockbuster? What went wrong at BuzzFeed News? And will summer travel be a nightmare?

14:59

Now playing

- Source: CNN Business

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (14)

Video Ad Feedback

The downside of working from home, the metaverse might be doomed, and the case for really long movies

14:34

Now playing

- Source: CNN Business

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (15)

Video Ad Feedback

Is AI the new Napster? Can Montana really ban TikTok? And is Apple's new savings account a good deal?

12:55

Now playing

- Source: CNN Business

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (16)

Video Ad Feedback

What happened to Vice? Why is Amazon downsizing? And should the US ban TikTok

14:47

Now playing

- Source: CNN

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (17)

Video Ad Feedback

SVB collapse blame game, crypto banks fail, and the truth about password safety

14:19

Now playing

- Source: CNN Business

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (18)

Video Ad Feedback

The debate over Daylight Saving Time, March Madness money, and Elon Musk's FTC problem

14:22

Now playing

- Source: CNN

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (19)

Video Ad Feedback

Hollywood's Ozempic craze, a real-life 'Succession' drama, and the downfall of HQ Trivia

13:29

Now playing

- Source: CNN

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (20)

Video Ad Feedback

Junk airline & hotel fees, the death of social media and the dream of a 4-day work week

14:56

Now playing

- Source: CNN

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (21)

Video Ad Feedback

How is Musk doing at Twitter? Why are EVs getting bigger? And why so many meetings?!

14:33

Now playing

- Source: CNN

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (22)

Video Ad Feedback

Crypto Super Bowl ads have vanished, fake meat is fading, and shopping on Amazon is getting worse

15:24

Now playing

- Source: CNN Business

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (23)

Video Ad Feedback

Used cars are finally getting cheaper and everything you need to know about tipping

11:12

Now playing

- Source: CNN Business

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (24)

Video Ad Feedback

The Elon Musk mystique is fading and this teacher says don't ban ChatGPT

11:00

Now playing

- Source: CNN Business

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (25)

Video Ad Feedback

A new phase in the battle over working from home, Madison Square Garden's 'enemies' list, and a $500 version of Tinder

14:22

Now playing

- Source: CNN Business

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (26)

Video Ad Feedback

Sam Bankman-Fried says 'F**k Regulators', Musk's Twitter ultimatum, and making TikToks instead of ads

13:34

Now playing

- Source: CNN Business

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (27)

Video Ad Feedback

Elon Musk vs. Tim Cook, Sam Bankman-Fried's media apology tour, and why shopping on Amazon is getting worse

14:40

Now playing

- Source: CNN

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (28)

Video Ad Feedback

Elon Musk's 'wild man strategy,' the next crypto shoe to drop, and the TikTok boogeyman

13:16

Now playing

- Source: CNN

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (29)

Video Ad Feedback

How crypto's golden boy lost billions, the end of quiet quitting, and the biggest mistake the Powerball winner can make

14:26

Now playing

- Source: CNN

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (30)

Video Ad Feedback

Inside Musk's Twitter, Musk echoes Donald Trump, and an antitrust earthquake

14:38

Now playing

- Source: CNN Business

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (31)

Video Ad Feedback

Watch: Tough times at Tesla, Kanye's Parler games and what this supermarket merger could mean for your grocery bill

12:55

Now playing

- Source: CNN Business

New York CNN Business

No one expected the Federal Reserve to be able to smother inflation swiftly. But after seven months of rapidly rising interest rates, the central bank has hardly made a dent.

Thursday’s look at the September consumer price data shows we’re not much better off now than we were in March, when the Fed began its aggressive monetary tightening. Back then, overall consumer prices were up 8.5% year over year. Now, they’re up 8.2%.

Core prices, which exclude volatile food and energy categories and are widely seen as a more reliable barometer of underlying inflation, hit 6.6% annually in September — their highest since 1982.

“This inflation report today was an unmitigated disaster,” wrote Christopher S. Rupkey, chief economist at Fwdbonds, a financial markets research company. “It shows whatever Fed officials are doing, it is just not working.”

The Fed has doubled down on its plans to wring inflation from the US economy by any means necessary, deploying massive interest rate hikes in the hopes of damping demand for goods and services.

Yet despite raising rates at an unprecedented speed, there’s little sign of prices easing up. Still, the Fed is determined to stay on its path, wagering that the US’s strong labor market can tolerate the stress of higher borrowing costs.

People shop for groceries during the grand opening of Stater Bros. Markets at the site of an old Kmart in Riverside, California, on Wednesday, Sept. 28, 2022. Watchara Phomicinda/MediaNews Group/The Press-Enterprise/Getty Images Surging prices show the Fed must continue its tough battle against inflation

“The Fed will see this as a license to stay aggressive,” wrote Jan Szilagyi, CEO of Toggle AI, an investment research firm.

Thursday’s hotter-than-expected inflation report is the last major economic snapshot Fed policymakers will take in before their next meeting at the start of November, and all but guarantees another 0.75% rate hike. Investors are now pricing in a 97% chance of a fourth-straight increase of three-quarters of a percentage point.

‘Some pain’

The Federal Reserve is leaning on the most powerful weapon in its arsenal to ensure price stability: interest rates.

It’s a sledgehammer approach to solving a delicate economic puzzle.

Fed Chairman Jerome Powell recently acknowledged that the broad impact of higher borrowing costs will bring “some pain to households and businesses” — a euphemistic nod to rising unemployment and a possible recession.

Inflicting pain now rather than letting inflation seep into the consumer psyche has become the Fed’s mantra. In minutes from its last meeting released Wednesday, Fed officials emphasized that “the cost of taking too little action to bring down inflation likely outweighed the cost of taking too much action.”

Visitors at Nankin-machi in Kobe, Hyogo Prefecture, Japan, on Sunday, Aug. 14, 2022. Japan's gross domestic productgrewat an annualized pace of 2.2% in the second quarter of this year,as consumer spending picked up following the end of coronavirus curbs on businesses. Soichiro Koriyama/Bloomberg/Getty Images How the United States is exporting inflation to other countries

In other words, the Fed would rather crash the US economy into a recession (and potentially drag much of the global economy down with it) than wind up in an inflationary tailspin. But in the meantime, that means consumers are bearing the pain of simultaneously high prices and high borrowing costs.

Soon, that pain could be compounded by job losses — or “labor market softening,” in Fed parlance.

The Fed believes the strong labor market has contributed to inflation, along with a bunch of factors far outside the central bank’s jurisdiction, such as supply chain disruptions, the war in Ukraine, and corporations that are keeping prices elevated even as their costs go down.

And while the ideal outcome would result in minimal job losses and lower prices — the elusive “soft landing” — the likelihood of that scenario is now practically non-existent.

“Rather than walking a tightrope between a ‘soft landing’ and recession…the Fed now faces the potential of killing off the economy’s job creation impetus beyond a simple rebalancing of the labor market in the name of taming inflation,” said PNC senior economist Kurt Rankin.

Is the Fed losing the fight against inflation?

So far, it’s certainly not winning. But the effects of rate hikes can take months to be felt in the real economy.

Or, as Fed vice chair Lael Brainard put it in a speech this week: “The moderation in demand due to monetary policy tightening is only partly realized so far.”

Brainard noted that the “transmission of tighter policy” — read: pain — is most evident in the housing market. Mortgage rates, which are heavily influenced by the Fed’s key rate, have more than doubled this year.

The average 30-year fixed mortgage rate averaged 6.9% this week — the highest it’s been in 20 years. A year ago, that rate was just over 3%.

“We continue to see a tale of two economies in the data,” said Sam Khater, Freddie Mac’s chief economist. “Strong job and wage growth are keeping consumers’ balance sheets positive, while lingering inflation, recession fears and housing affordability are driving housing demand down precipitously.”

Unequal pain

Thursday’s disastrous CPI report cements for economists and investors a reality that millions of Americans already feel deeply as they spend more of their income on basic necessities like food and shelter. More and more people are coping with inflation by leaning on credit cards, which only get harder to pay off as interest rates climb.

The so-called “food at home index,” a proxy for grocery store prices, was up 13% last month from a year earlier. Shelter, which accounts for a third of the CPI reading, rose 6.6%, the most in more than 30 years.

And even though mortgage rates are rising, the costs of housing are “simply brutal,” wrote RSM chief economist Joe Brusuelas. “Whatever relief in core inflation that is in the pipeline… it is not flowing through to an easing in rents.”

The Fed’s rate hikes may have won the battle with core commodities prices softening, wrote Rupkey of Fwdbonds. But the Fed is “losing the war” when it comes to price hikes for the services sector.

“Today’s red hot inflation report brings the economy closer than ever to recession next year,” he said.

Ultimately, some say the problem of pandemic-era inflation is just too complex to be fixed with the Fed’s blunt tools.

“Supply chain bottlenecks, a volatile global energy market, and rampant corporate profiteering can’t be solved by additional rate hikes,” said Rakeen Mabud, chief economist of the left-leaning Groundwork Collaborative policy group. “It’s time for Chair Powell and the Fed to step aside and for Congress to step in.”

Related

Ad Feedback

Ad Feedback

More from CNN Business

David Paul Morris/Bloomberg/Getty Images Mortgage rates rise to just short of 7% Aug 10, 2023
Mikhail Svetlov/Getty Images Co-founder of Russia’s equivalent of Google slams ‘barbaric’ invasion of Ukraine Aug 10, 2023

Ad Feedback

CNN Business Videos

Ocean Alliance Scientist gets unusual idea while covered in snot that could save whales Aug 10, 2023
Israel’s judicial overhaul hits the tech sector Aug 10, 2023
U.S. headline inflation rises to 3.2% in July Aug 10, 2023
U.S. markets tumble ahead of inflation report Aug 10, 2023

Ad Feedback

Ad Feedback

The Fed is losing the war against inflation | CNN Business (2024)

FAQs

Has the Fed won its war against inflation? ›

Investors are taking Wednesday's inflation report as a sign that the Fed has won its war on inflation. The Consumer Price Index report for June showed that prices cooled 3% annually, lower than the 3.1% expected by economists.

What is the Fed decision for July 2023? ›

In a related action, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System voted unanimously to approve a 1/4 percentage point increase in the primary credit rate to 5.5 percent, effective July 27, 2023.

What is the Fed interest rate decision for 2023? ›

The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) raised interest rates to 5.25%–5.50% at the July 2023 meeting, marking 11 rate hikes this cycle aimed at curbing high inflation.

Did the Federal Reserve fight against inflation just got harder? ›

The Federal Reserve's fight against inflation just got harder. The high-profile collapse of two regional banks in recent days has sparked new fears about the country's banking system and raised questions about how much higher the Fed should push interest rates in its effort to curb prices.

Who controls inflation in the US? ›

The Federal Reserve seeks to control inflation by influencing interest rates. When inflation is too high, the Federal Reserve typically raises interest rates to slow the economy and bring inflation down.

What has the Fed been doing about inflation? ›

The Fed's aggressive streak of rate hikes, which have made mortgages, auto loans, credit cards and business borrowing costlier, have been intended to slow spending and defeat the worst bout of inflation in four decades. Average credit card rates have surpassed 20% to a record high.

What will the Fed funds rate be in 2025? ›

The federal funds rate declines from 5.4 percent in the fourth quarter of 2023 to 4.5 percent in the fourth quarter of 2024 and 3.6 percent in the fourth quarter of 2025.

Will the Fed raise rates again in 2023? ›

How high will interest rates go in 2023? In June, the Fed forecast additional rate hikes amounting to a half percentage point this year, according to officials' median estimate.

Will Fed raise rates July 2023? ›

Key Takeaways. The Fed raised rates by 25 basis points in July, continuing its tightening in hopes of slowing inflation.

Will interest rates go down in 2023 in the US? ›

The latest monthly Housing Forecast from Fannie Mae, released July 19, has the average 30-year fixed rate remaining high at 6.8% during the third quarter of 2023, pulling back slightly to around 6.6% by year-end. The mortgage giant doesn't expect rates to dip below 6% until the fourth quarter of 2024.

Will interest rates go down in 2024? ›

Fannie Mae: Economists at Fannie Mae forecast that the 30-year fixed mortgage rate will average 6.6% in Q4 2023. Then Fannie Mae expects mortgage rates to grind down to an average of 5.9% in Q4 2024.

How much will interest rates rise in 2023? ›

How much have interest rates gone up by in 2023? The total rate increase for 2023 so far is 1.00% per annum, with the RBA deciding to increase the cash rate by 0.25% per annum in February, March, May and June (no changes announced in January, April, July and August).

Is inflation going to get worse? ›

Inflation in 2023: experts predict 'worst is yet to come' as recession looms. Dec 8 (Reuters) - Globally, people are experiencing inflation at levels not seen for decades as prices surge for essentials like food, heating, transport and accommodation. And though a peak could be in sight, the effects may yet get worse.

Is work from home causing inflation? ›

Researchers at the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco said Monday the work-from-home shift brought on by the pandemic may account for more than half of overall home price increases in the United States. That goes for rents too. According to surveys, 30% of work was still being done at home as of last month.

Is the Federal Reserve the reason for inflation? ›

There is a close relationship. When monetary policy is too easy – either because the Federal Reserve sets the interest rate too low or because it increases money growth too rapidly – there will be an increase in inflation, as we are seeing now.

What are the interest rates in July 2023? ›

Mortgage rate trends by loan type
July 2023June 2023
Conforming Loan Rates6.88%6.78%
FHA Loan Rates6.78%6.67%
VA Loan Rates6.62%6.53%
Jumbo Loan Rates7.05%6.99%

Does the Fed meet in July 2023? ›

July 25-26, 2023

A joint meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee and the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System was held in the offices of the Board of Governors on Tuesday, July 25, 2023, at 10:00 a.m. and continued on Wednesday, July 26, 2023, at 9:00 a.m.

What is the interest rate on July 26? ›

BENGALURU, July 19 (Reuters) - The U.S. Federal Reserve will raise its benchmark overnight interest rate by 25 basis points to the 5.25%-5.50% range on July 26, according to all 106 economists polled by Reuters, with a majority still saying that will be the last increase of the current tightening cycle.

What is the Fed money supply 2023? ›

What was United States's Money Supply M2 in Jun 2023? United States Money Supply M2 was reported at 20,889.500 USD bn in Jun 2023 See the table below for more data.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Roderick King

Last Updated:

Views: 5898

Rating: 4 / 5 (71 voted)

Reviews: 86% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Roderick King

Birthday: 1997-10-09

Address: 3782 Madge Knoll, East Dudley, MA 63913

Phone: +2521695290067

Job: Customer Sales Coordinator

Hobby: Gunsmithing, Embroidery, Parkour, Kitesurfing, Rock climbing, Sand art, Beekeeping

Introduction: My name is Roderick King, I am a cute, splendid, excited, perfect, gentle, funny, vivacious person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.