Fed Hikes Again by 75 Basis Points, Hints at Entering End Phase

Federal Reserve officials signaled their aggressive campaign to curb inflation could be entering its final phase even as they delivered their fourth straight 75 basis-point interest-rate increase.

While central bankers said that “ongoing increases” will still likely be needed to bring rates to a level that are “sufficiently restrictive to return inflation to 2% over time,” they added fresh language to their statement after a two-day meeting in Washington.

“The pace of future increases” in borrowing costs would take into account the cumulative tightening of monetary policy, the lag with which works and developments in the economy and finance, they said.

The addition will spur speculation that Chair Jerome Powell and colleagues will slow the pace of rate increases with many Wall Street economists anticipating they will downshift to a 50 basis-point increase when they next gather in December.

In financial markets, swaps traders cut the amount of pricing in for the December meeting and pushed where they see the peak rate for the cycle to below 5% from around 5.05% earlier Wednesday.