Data on Thursday showed U.S. consumer prices rose at their fastest pace since the early 1980s, fuelling market speculation for a hefty 50-basis-point hike from the Fed’s March 15-16 meeting.
The current Fed fund effective target is 0-0.25%.
As the Fed gets set to raise pandemic-era rates, here are the estimates from major global investment banks on how far and fast rates will rise:
* Citi now expects 150 bps of tightening this year, starting with a 50 bps move in March, followed by four, quarter-point increases in May, June, September and December.
* Credit Suisse (SIX:CSGN) now expects the Fed to hike a cumulative 175 bps this year, beginning with a 50 bps increase at the upcoming March meeting.
* Societe Generale (OTC:SCGLY) now expects five rate hikes of 25 bps this year, starting in March.
* Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS) says 125 bps of policy tightening this year is “appropriate”, and will come in the form of four 25 bps rate hikes plus a 25 bps fed funds equivalent runoff of the Fed’s balance sheet. Rate hike timing highly data-dependent.
* Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS) said it is raising its forecast to include seven consecutive 25 bps rate hikes at each of the remaining Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meetings in 2022 from a previous expectation of five hikes.
* BofA Global Research expects the Fed to hike rates by 25 bps at each of this year’s remaining seven meetings, unchanged from its previous outlook. However, it said there is a risk of a 50 bps hike in the Fed’s March policy meeting.
* HSBC’s said it expects the Fed to roll out a 50 bps hike in March and four more quarter-point rate rises in 2022.
* Deutsche Bank (DE:DBKGn) said it expects the Fed to call a 50 bps hike in March plus five more 25 bps hikes in 2022, with a hike at all but the November meeting.
* J.P.Morgan said on Jan. 28 it expects five rate hikes in 2022, up from the four it estimated previously.
* Barclays (LON:BARC) now expects the Fed to raise rates by 25 bps five times this year, up from three hikes forecast earlier.
Source: Economy - investing.com