Fed's Fisher warns on growth but wary of inflation
By Alister Bull
FORT WORTH, Texas (Reuters) - The U.S. economy is in a slowdown that could steepen but inflation is also a threat that must not be ignored, the president of the Dallas Federal Reserve Bank, Richard Fisher, said on Friday.
"The mainstream analysis is that that slowdown will lead to economic anemia for a couple of quarters and then pick up again," Fisher told the Petroleum Club of Forth Worth. "There are some risks that we're seeking to manage but it may be that economic growth will be even slower than we envision."
Fisher is a voting member of the monetary policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee and voted against a half-percentage-point interest rate cut at its last meeting from fear of inflation.
Although acknowledging that growth was weak, Fisher said that data since the last meeting had not altered his assessment of the risks to the economic outlook.
He said that the economy should avoid "sustained negative growth" -- he declined to use the word "recession" -- and stressed the Fed must ensure that inflation expectations were contained, while signaling that it risks losing this battle.
"There is a question as to whether inflation expectations are well anchored," Fisher told reporters after the speech. "The 12-month number for the CPI is running at a very high level ... and the components of that (rise) are worrisome," he said, referring to the U.S. Consumer Price Index.
Treasury Inflation Protected Securities (TIPS) provide some guide to what investors expect U.S. inflation will be in the future, and the spread in yields between TIPS and comparable maturity Treasury paper has recently mounted.
Fisher said there were competing explanations for the change, but no hiding from the fact that it might be bad news. Continued...



