Dimon warns world not ready for 7% Fed rate: Times of India
THE world may not be prepared for a worst-case scenario of Federal Reserve benchmark interest rates hitting 7 per cent along with stagflation, JPMorgan Chase & Co CEO Jamie Dimon said in an interview with the Times of India.
“If they are going to have lower volumes and higher rates, there will be stress in the system,” Dimon said while visiting Mumbai for a JPMorgan investor summit. “Warren Buffett says you find out who is swimming naked when the tide goes out. That will be the tide going out.”
Dimon, who has said rates may need to rise further to fight inflation, added that the difference between 5 per cent and 7 per cent would be more painful for the economy than going from 3 per cent to 5 per cent was.
His comments contrast with the consensus view that the Fed is approaching the end of its tightening cycle after 5.25 percentage points of hikes that lifted the benchmark rate to 5.5 per cent – the highest level in 22 years. US policymakers have signalled that rates will need to stay higher for longer to contain inflation, though money markets are pricing in cuts from next year.
The US dollar extended its rise on Tuesday (Sep 26), tracking 10-year Treasury yields – which to some extent was driven by hawkish Fedspeak and Dimon’s warning, according to Christopher Wong, Singapore-based FX strategist at Oversea-Chinese Banking.
If the key rate climbed to 7 per cent, it would have serious implications for American businesses and consumers. Already, economists put the probability of a US recession over the next 12 months at 60 per cent – and that’s more optimistic than Bloomberg Economics’ prediction of a slump as soon as this year.
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A rate of 7 per cent would douse recent optimism among Fed officials about their ability to engineer a soft landing in the economy with the unemployment rate still very low at 3.8 per cent and signs of prices easing.
“Going from zero to 2 per cent was almost no increase. Going from zero to 5 per cent caught some people off guard, but no one would have taken 5 per cent out of the realm of possibility,” Dimon said. “I am not sure if the world is prepared for 7 per cent.”
The Fed left the target range for its benchmark rate unchanged in a widely expected move earlier this month, though fresh quarterly projections showed 12 of 19 officials favoured another hike this year. One policymaker saw rates peaking above 6 per cent.
Fed Chairman Jerome Powell has said future rate decisions will be based on incoming data.
“The world is certainly not prepared for a 7 per cent Federal Reserve funds rate,” Charlie Jamieson, chief investment officer at Jamieson Coote Bonds, told Bloomberg Television on Tuesday.
“At that level, we would expect that we would have a deflationary asset unwind, it would burst a lot of asset bubbles, it just simply wouldn’t be sustainable.” BLOOMBERG
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