After more than two years of heavy-handed rate-raising by the Federal Reserve, which was largely responsible for putting the brakes on a historically hot pandemic housing market, Fed Chair Jerome Powell yesterday explicitly said that the central bank believes the country has avoided a recession and navigated a so-called âsoft landingââbut still sees housing inflation as something that will linger longer than expected.
In a conversation with Ellen Zentner, president of the National Association for Business Economics, Powell at least partially abandoned the deeply cautious tone he has hewed to for the past several months when discussing inflation, noting that economic data has been consistently signaling positive for months as the Fed parses out a reversal of its interest-raising campaign.
âThere is really nothing I can point to in the economy that suggests that a downturn is more likely (now) than it is at any time,â Powell told Zentner.
After one larger-than-expected cut, real estate professionals are already seeing some signs of a rebounding housing market. And while mortgage rates are clearly a major factor, other issuesâand inflation created by housingâremain a potential roadblock to a normalized market.
One of Powellâs more notable admissions in the conversation with Zentner was that the Fed previously underestimated how difficult it would be to bring housing inflation down. While rents, and the monthly price of owning a home measured by the âowner-equivalent rentâ metric have begun slowing from their dramatic pandemic level increases, the decrease has been âsluggish,â Powell said.
âI went from thinking at the beginning that this would happen fairly quickly, to now thinking that that process will play out over a period of some yearsâtwo, three, four years,â he said.
That suggestionâthat the cost of shelter is still high, and hasnât shown the same moderation of other goods and servicesâwill come as absolutely no surprise to real estate practitioners, who have watched many markets remain unaffordable as home prices and rents have continued to climb. But Powellâs suggestion that it could take up to four years for these increases to return to pre-pandemic levels will certainly be discouraging to buyers, many of whom have seen homeownership rising out of their grasp.
Housing economists previously pointed out that the shelter inflation data the Fed is relying on is lagging, and housing cost increases are actually much lower than current measurements show. Powell was careful to say that he thought housing inflation was on the right trajectory, saying the âdirection of travel is clear.â
He was even more explicit in saying that a lack of progress in housing inflation wasnât necessarily going to prevent the Fed from moving forward in the next stage of its âdual mandateâ to achieve maximum employment sustained 2% inflation.
âWeâre trying to get back to a world where inflation is 2%, and the combination of (goods, services and housing) is less important than the fact that you get the aggregate back,â he explained. âI just pointed out that goods inflation is kind of back to where it was and so is non-housing services. And that is most of the inflation bucket, but the third one is not there. Any combination of those things will do, but it really looks like the third over time is going back down to where we would like it to be.â
Sticking the landing
But consumers are concerned with many other economic elements and trends as they make housing decisions, and Powellâs other comments reflect an increased optimism for the near-term economy.Â
Asked to look back on developments since the September rate cut, Powell pointed to upward revisions of Gross Domestic Income (GDI) data which âremoved a downside riskâ to the economy, he claimed, as well as other revisions to consumer spending data which also suggests purchases can continue âat a healthy levelâ while people continue to see savings rise.
Looking at the labor market, Powell was somewhat more cautious, saying that there is still âtensionâ in how the country has added or lost jobs, but claiming the other data might offset any worries from this.
âThe level of job creation is maybe not quite at the level it needs to be to hold unemployment constant given assumptions about supply,â he said.Â
But as far as the pace of interest rate cuts, Powell went back to his refrain that the Fed is making every decision on a meeting-by-meeting basis and looking at every piece of economic data that comes in before making a decision, but also added that if the economy performs âas expected,â there will be two more rate cuts this year for a total of 50 basis points in reduction.
âThis is not a committee that feels like it is in a hurry to cut rates quickly,â he said.
Asked point-blank by Zentner about âhow (he) is thinking about the next (Fed) meeting,â Powell laughed.
âWeâll take everything into account,â he said. âWe will do what it takes in terms of the speed in which we move.â