Bloomberg, July 1, 2010
Federal Reserve policy makers expressed caution about the outlook for the U.S. recovery and bank lending without backing any new steps by the central bank to stimulate growth. Atlanta Fed President Dennis Lockhart said yesterday that while the recovery isn’t sustainable enough yet to warrant raising interest rates, he doesn’t see a need for additional asset purchases to aid the economy. Fed Governor Elizabeth Duke said it may take years to return to pre-recession credit levels and that there’s “no single step” to unclog lending markets. U.S. central bankers are sticking to their 18-month policy of leaving the benchmark interest rate near zero with the European debt crisis sapping investor confidence and U.S. stocks plunging to their lowest close since October. Last week Fed officials renewed a pledge to keep the rate at a record low for an “extended period.” “The underlying conditions are probably less robust than was generally expected,” said Keith Hembre, Minneapolis-based chief economist at U.S. Bancorp’s FAF Advisors Inc., which oversees about $91 billion. At the same time, “I don’t think there’s any evidence yet at this point that suggests that they are going to be so weak that it will put further downward pressure on inflation and upward pressure on unemployment to the degree that it would necessitate further creative easing on the part of the Fed,” Hembre said.
Stocks Fall
The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index fell 1 percent to 1,030.71 after Moody’s Investors Service warned that it may downgrade Spain. Yields on two-year Treasury securities touched a record low earlier yesterday of 0.5856 percent before rising to 0.60 percent. Two days ago, Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke met with President Barack Obama at the White House. Afterward, Obama said the U.S. economy is strengthening even as it faces “headwinds” from the European debt crisis and that Bernanke shares his view that the economy is growing stronger. Bernanke said he and Obama talked about how the U.S. economy is being affected by events in Europe, without elaborating. The day before, Fed Governor Kevin Warsh, appointed in 2006 by then-President George W. Bush, a Republican, said any decision by the central bank to expand its $2.35 trillion balance sheet must be subject to “strict scrutiny.” Lockhart told reporters yesterday after a speech in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, that he respects Warsh’s view.
‘Long-Term Credibility’
“Whenever you are purchasing government obligations in the current conditions of deficits and rising national debt, you have to think about the long-term credibility, which I think was Kevin’s point,” Lockhart said. Chicago Fed President Charles Evans said yesterday in an interview with CNBC that the debt crisis in Europe has “definitely imposed additional risks on the U.S. recovery.” In a speech to the Rotary Club of Baton Rouge, Lockhart said there’s a “small risk of deflation,” and the recovery faces threats from Europe’s debt crisis, drops in state and local spending, commercial real estate losses and the Gulf of Mexico oil spill. “Recent developments make me even more convinced that current policy is appropriate,” Lockhart said. “Financial markets and many businesses are more nervous today than a few weeks and months ago, and it’s my view that monetary policy makers should hold to a guarded policy stance and evaluate carefully the risk and reward of a change of policy.”
Hoenig’s Dissent
The remarks were some of the most downbeat on the U.S. economy from a Fed official in recent months. Lockhart, 63, doesn’t vote on Federal Open Market Committee decisions this year. Kansas City Fed President Thomas Hoenig has called for an increase in the Fed’s benchmark rate within months and has dissented from four FOMC decisions this year. The Fed has left the overnight interbank lending rate target at a record low of zero to 0.25 percent since December 2008. Central bankers are concerned that persistent unemployment May hamper the recovery. The Labor Department will report on July 2 that unemployment rose to 9.8 percent in June from 9.7 percent in May, according to the median forecast of economists in a Bloomberg News survey. Recent economic data have pointed to weakness in housing and consumer spending.
Consumer Confidence
Consumer confidence sank in June more than forecast as Americans became distressed over the outlook for jobs and incomes, a June 29 report from the New York-based Conference Board showed. Sales of new homes fell in May to the lowest level on record, the Commerce Department said June 23. Two days later, the agency lowered its estimate for first-quarter economic growth to an annual pace of 2.7 percent from 3 percent to reflect a smaller gain in consumer spending and a bigger trade deficit. While U.S. financial firms have “rather small and manageable direct exposure to the Greek government” and other European sovereign borrowers, there’s still a risk that financial-market pressures may be transmitted to the U.S. economy and that a stronger dollar may weaken demand for exports, Lockhart said. For state and local governments, budget gaps are likely to widen in 2010 and 2011, with one unspecified estimate of the combined deficit for all states this year at $144 billion, Lockhart said. “This situation is our nation’s very immediate analog of the public finance pressures being felt in Europe,” he said.
To contact the reporter on this story: Scott Lanman in Washington at slanman@bloomberg.net.
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