US data better, but Fed likely to hold off on rate rise


Evidence is piling up that the U.S. economy is rebounding from the past few months' stall, with consumers spending more, a rebound in job creation, and wages beginning to rise. But analysts believe the Federal Reserve will want to see more when it meets in the coming week to again weigh hiking interest rates. The Federal Open Market Committee meets on monetary policy on Tuesday and Wednesday, about the very time that, a year ago, it expected to be announcing a rise in its benchmark federal funds rate.

The rate has sat at an extraordinarily low zero percent since 2008 in an effort to rebuild the U.S. economy from the Great Recession with a flood of cheap dollars. Persistent underemployment, extremely low inflation and weak wage growth has kept the rate in place, with the Fed worried the economy could still be vulnerable to tighter monetary conditions, six years after the recession ended. The surprise economic contraction of the first quarter put any action on hold, though the FOMC has said that it views the causes of the stall of the past few months as "transitory." Since April, though, key data which the FOMC looks at to decide whether the economy can handle higher rates - inflation, employment and wages - have all shown signs of improvement. Fed Chair Janet Yellen has repeatedly stressed the need for signs of firm tightening in the jobs market, even if inflation stays low. Released on June 5, the May job creation report was surprisingly strong, with the jobs market absorbing a surge of returnees, and wages turning up at the same time, all signs of tightening.

Data this week backed that up: job vacancies rose and employers said they are and expect to be paying people more.

But the other data is mixed. Consumer spending has risen, but mainly on cars; otherwise, U.S. shoppers seem very cautious.

Prices are weaker than the Fed - which wants to see inflation around 2 percent - favors. Analysts say that because the FOMC needs to see steady improvement over time, it will likely wait a couple months more to move, even if Fed policy-makers seem anxious to get past the initial increase.

"The June FOMC (policy) statement will largely be a placeholder for what we continue to believe will be a September rate hike," said Deutsche Bank Friday. "A June rate hike is not entirely off the table, but is highly unlikely. September is more likely, but that first hike is data-dependent," said economists at IHS. When it does, it will likely be the first in a series of increases aiming to "normalize" U.S. monetary policy, the Fed says. That prospect has driven volatility in global markets for two years now, pushing the dollar higher and spurring capital flows out from emerging markets, which has left many struggling to shore up growth.