By Manorajan Sharma
The central banks across the world were largely on a rate hiking spree for the most part of 2022 and 2023. But given the transformed ground-realities, the evolving course of monetary policy has evoked widespread debate across the development spectrum. Some of the main strands of this debate relate to the impact of hiking interest rates, behaviour of workers, firms and consumers. There are also grave geopolitical risks and if the Israel-Hamas conflict leads to a full-fledged regional conflagration in the Middle East, it will cripple the global economy.
Such interest rate hikes are part of a global pattern. This thesis can be substantiated by the fact that nine developed economies (with Japan being the notable exception) raised rates by a combined 3,965 basis points (bps) in a cycle that started in September 2021.
The resilience and robustness of the US economy despite a slew of rate hikes unprecedented in four decades surprised several analysts.
US Fed’s November Policy Action
Against this backdrop, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) on November 1, 2023 kept the rates unchanged for the second consecutive time at 5.25% to 5.5% range (i.e., the highest level in 22 years), where it has been stuck since July 2023. This decision, which occurred against the canvas of a growing economy and labor market and inflation well over the central bank’s target, marked a careful move “to address both the risk of being misled by a few good months of data, and the risk of over-tightening”. It also gave policymakers time to “assess additional information and its implications for monetary policy”.
The traction in the economy is manifested in the growth in gross domestic product (GDP) of the US at an annualised rate of 4.9 % in Q3 and nonfarm payrolls growth totalled 336,000 in this quarter. Hence the US central bank justifiably maintained “economic activity expanded at a strong pace in the third quarter”.
Meanwhile, the US labour costs rose significantly in the September quarter amid strong wage growth. In terms of the Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics data, the Employment Cost Index (ECI), the broadest measure of labour costs, rose 1.1 % in July-September 2023 after rising 1 % in April-June 2023.
The personal consumption expenditures price index (PCE) rose 3.4 % in September and the core PCE price index rose 3.7 %. Over 3 % inflation strongly suggests that inflation management will endure and rate cuts may still be some distance away.
Resilient economic growth provides comfort to the Fed in keeping interest rates high for some time. But there are also issues of the probable timing of the reversal of the rate hike cycle, the Fed’s perception on the job markets, inflation and economic growth and the lagged effect of the cumulative impact of rate hikes on the economy and corporate world.
While the July hike may have been the last in this cycle, financial and geopolitical risks buttress the higher-for-longer stance. The Fed may be close to the end of its rate-hiking cycle but a hike in December 2023 is not entirely ruled out should crude oil prices spike.
Macroeconomic impact on India
While Asian currencies buoyed by dropping U.S. yields post the Fed Policy, the Indian rupee was unchanged. But the falling oil prices and sliding U.S. yields contained the upside pressure (in USD/INR).
Brent crude on November 8, 2023 fell below $80 a barrel for the first time since mid-July on concerns of receding demand in the U.S. and China. Given that India predominantly imports oil, falling oil price augurs well for India. As of November 2, India’s average crude oil basket price was$87.09 per barrel, slightly lower than the Octoberaverage of $90.08. Morgan Stanley’s note stressed that if oil prices sustainably rise to $110 per barrel, it could strain India’s macroeconomic stability, inducing the RBI to resume its rate hike cycle.
The 10-year U.S. yield dropped below 4.50%, reaching the lowest in more than a month and is now down more than 50 basis points from its recent high. The Fed Chair suggests greater flexibility on economic forecasting during times of ‘unpredictable shocks’, but this guidance did not identify the US economy growth risks
The IMF has demonstrated that India has high debt but risks are moderate since India’s current debt is 81.9 % (China 83%) of GDP. Unlike China, India’s debt is likely to fall to 80.4 % in 2028 because of high growth, long debt maturities, large domestically held debt and denoted in home currency. Rising US Fed rate result in foreign investors selling out from theIndian stock markets as Indian markets become far less attractive for them.The rate hike also positively impacts US treasuries’ yield, which motivates foreign investors to pull their money out of the Indian markets and invest it in their own country.Secondly, higher interest rates leading to a weaker rupee vis-a-vis the dollar capping foreign investors returns on their investments. Thirdly, though foreign investors with a long-term horizon look beyond marginal rate hikes, small-term investors retreat because volatile market together with a weaker rupee requires hedging the positions, cutting short the returns.Higher interest rates also raise borrowing costs.
The domestic equity market was not impacted significantly in the wake of leaving the benchmark interest rates unchanged since market participants had already factored in the effects of these record interest rates. JPMorgan’s Pedro Martins maintains India has the strongest nominal GDP compounding among emerging markets because of demographic trends and investments in infrastructure. Two salient features in the Indian equity market are as China’s real GDP growth slows down, India is delivering a stronger GDP than China and some pension funds in the U.S. are reallocating their investments with India being the largest recipient, the others being Indonesia, Saudi Arabia and Mexico.
Pathway to the Future
Where do we go from here? Going forward, the disconcerting macro-economic complexities, such as, tighter financial conditions faced by households and businesses, inflation still to reach 2 % on a sustained basis despite the perceptible decline in inflation from its four-decade peak last year, to 3.7 % on an annual basis, the need to calibrate an economy outperforming expectations, and the hawkish tone and tenor of the Policy, our sense is that the Fed would adopt a status quoist Policy in their next meeting on December 12-13, 2023. Despite cognizable dilemmas, we do maintain that rate cuts would occur in 2024.
The Fed reaffirmed its commitment to achieving itsdual mandateof maximum employment and price stability. In pursuit of this dual mandate, the Fed’s data-driven and evidence-based policy would be influenced by the data and information on issues such as theConsumer Price Index (CPI),payrolls, andGDP growth.
(Manorajan Sharma, Chief Economist, Infomerics Ratings. Views expressed are author’s own. Please consult your financial advisor before investing.)