Explainer: Charting the Fed’s policy path

Federal Reserve Chair Powell testifies before House Financial Services Committee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington

U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell testifies before a House Financial Services Committee hearing on “The Federal Reserve’s Semi-Annual Monetary Policy Report” on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., June 21, 2023. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo

July 26 (Reuters) – U.S. central bankers have signaled they are likely to raise interest rates at the end of their two-day policy meeting on Wednesday after holding the benchmark overnight interest rate steady in the 5.00%-5.25% range in June. Data since then has kept that decision on track. Here’s a guide to some of the numbers shaping the policy debate:

RETAIL SALES (Released on July 18, next release on Aug. 15): Retail sales rose less than expected in June, increasing just 0.2%. But a separate measure known as “core” retail sales, which better reflects underlying economic growth, posted a strong 0.6% gain. The overall slow pace of increase may indicate the start of a pullback by consumers, something that the Fed has been anticipating and, through its rate hikes, trying to encourage.

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INFLATION (released on July 12, next release on July 28): Consumer price inflation tumbled in June to a 3% annual rate, from 4% in May, the slowest pace since March of 2021 and a sign of what some economists expect is the start of steady progress for the Fed’s inflation fight.

It likely won’t dissuade officials from a rate hike at this week’s meeting, a move that is widely expected in financial markets. Prices based on the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge increased 3.8% in May on a year-over-year basis, but underlying inflation pressures remained stuck in overdrive, with the core personal consumption expenditures index at 4.6%.

But it could begin to undercut arguments for more hikes beyond that point, and may shift the Fed’s relentlessly hawkish tone.

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EMPLOYMENT (Released on July 7, next release on Aug. 4): The U.S. economy added 209,000 jobs in June, fewer than expected and part of a continued pullback towards levels seen in the years before the coronavirus pandemic – job growth averaged around 180,000 per month from 2010 through 2019. But, notably for the Fed, average annual wage growth held at 4.4% for a third month in a row rather than slowing, as had been expected, and the unemployment rate fell slightly to 3.6%.

That evidence of continued strength in the labor market, even amid some gradual slowing, is likely to keep the U.S. central bank on track for another rate increase on Wednesday.

JOB OPENINGS: (Released on July 6, next release on Aug. 1) Fed Chair Jerome Powell keeps a close eye on the Labor Department’s Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey, or JOLTS, to derive what has become a key metric of the imbalance between labor supply and demand – the number of job openings for each jobseeker. During the pandemic there were nearly two jobs for every available worker. That ratio has dropped as the Fed’s rate hikes have slowed labor market demand, and in May hit its lowest level since November 2021 at around 1.6-to-1.

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BANK DATA: Released every Thursday and Friday

To some degree the Fed wants credit to become more expensive and less available. That’s how increases in its policy rate influence economic activity. But recent bank failures threatened both unwanted broader stress in the industry and a worse-than-anticipated credit crunch. Weekly data on bank lending to customers show loan growth is slowing. Borrowing by banks from the Fed, meanwhile, remains elevated but relatively stable on a week-to-week basis.

Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Andrea Ricci and Paul Simao

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Covers the U.S. Federal Reserve, monetary policy and the economy, a graduate of the University of Maryland and Johns Hopkins University with previous experience as a foreign correspondent, economics reporter and on the local staff of the Washington Post.

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