Generic Hero BannerGeneric Hero Banner
Latest market news

Fed hikes key rate, sees tighter credit

  • Market: Chemicals, Coal, Crude oil, Fertilizers, Metals, Natural gas
  • 22/03/23

The US Federal Reserve today raised its target interest rate by a quarter point, in line with expectations, even as it sees recent banking stresses helping in its bid to combat inflation.

The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) raised the federal funds target rate by 25 basis points, the second such increase in a row.

The Fed's 2023 projection for its target rate, called the federal funds rate, remained at a median of 5.1pc, unchanged from December, a sign the Fed may be nearing the end of its course of rate increases. The projection, known as the dot plot, is derived from expectations of board members and Fed bank presidents.

"If we need to raise rates higher, we will," Fed chairman Jerome Powell said in response to a question regarding the dot plot federal funds projection.

"For now, we see the likelihood of credit tightening" because of banking stresses, Powell said. "In a way, that substitutes for rate hikes."

The second consecutive quarter point hike followed a 50-basis point hike in December that came after four consecutive 75-basis point hikes earlier last year. The string of rate increases has taken the target rate to a range of 4.75-5pc from near zero at the beginning of 2022 in the most aggressive tightening since the 1980s.

The FOMC said it anticipates that "some additional policy firming may be appropriate" to return inflation to its 2pc target "over time" — adding "some" to the language used in prior statements.

The slowing pace of rate increases comes as authorities in Europe, North America and Asia take steps to stem the banking crisis that has upended financial markets and sent oil prices to a 15-month low. Swiss bank UBS on 19 March agreed to take over Credit Suisse for $3bn after depositors pulled funds from the bank in the wake of spreading contagion triggered by the prior week's failure of Silicon Valley Bank and a smaller bank in the US. The Federal Reserve led a group of central banks on 19 March to boost dollar swap lines to ensure global liquidity, following a 12 March statement assuring additional funding to eligible depository institutions to meet the needs of all depositors.

"The US banking system is sound and resilient," the FOMC said of the this month's banking crisis. "Recent developments are likely to result in tighter credit conditions for households and businesses and to weigh on economic activity, hiring, and inflation."

Tighter credit conditions

Goldman Sachs wrote in research this week that the tighter lending standards resulting from the banking stress would subtract between a quarter to a half percentage point from GDP growth in 2023, equivalent to the impact of a 25-50 percentage point of tightening of the fed funds rate.

Goldman Sachs had predicted the Fed would pause rate hikes as it said Fed officials would consider the stresses to the banking sector a greater threat than inflation. It added that the banking stress could also have disinflationary effects.

The Fed's latest rate hike comes as inflation has eased from last year's highs amid mounting signs the economy is slowing. US manufacturing has contracted for four months, home construction and purchases have cooled and retail sales have fallen in three of the last four months. While technology companies like Amazon have announced mass layoffs in recent weeks, the labor market remains solid, with unemployment near five-decade lows.

By raising the federal funds rate, an inter-bank overnight lending rate whose effects ripple across consumer and business lending rates, the Fed undermines demand for big-ticket items like cars, homes and equipment to rein in pricing pressures.

The US consumer price index in February rose by 6pc on an annual basis, the lowest since September 2021 and down from a 9.1pc peak in June that was the highest since 1981.


Sharelinkedin-sharetwitter-sharefacebook-shareemail-share

Related news posts

Argus illuminates the markets by putting a lens on the areas that matter most to you. The market news and commentary we publish reveals vital insights that enable you to make stronger, well-informed decisions. Explore a selection of news stories related to this one.

News
20/03/25

Nigeria's Trans-Niger oil pipeline restarts after fire

Nigeria's Trans-Niger oil pipeline restarts after fire

Lagos, 20 March (Argus) — Nigeria has restarted pumping crude through the 180,000 b/d Trans-Niger Pipeline (TNP) to the Bonny export terminal after an apparent attack led to a fire earlier this week, halting flows and prompting President Bola Tinubu to declare a state of emergency in Rivers State . The Renaissance Africa consortium — which only last week took over operatorship of the TNP and the Bonny terminal from Shell — said pipeline flows were restored on 19 March "following integrity inspection, testing and activation of a second pipeline within the network". The last 20km stretch of the 60km TNP, between the Cawthorne Channel and the Bonny terminal, has separate 30-inch and 24-inch lines. Renaissance Africa did not say which of the two is currently active. The fire on the pipeline caused a brief halt to operations at the Bonny terminal but loadings have now resumed. A source at state-owned oil firm NNPC told Argus that the Bryanston tanker started loading at the terminal at 23:54 local time on 19 March. Market participants said loading operations at the export terminal were behind schedule by up to two weeks anyway. Before the pipeline fire, the next scheduled operation at the terminal had been to pump 475,000 bl of Bonny Light crude to NNPC's 210,000 b/d Port Harcourt refinery. NNPC said it had to contain a flare incident at the refinery on 19 March. The company described it as "a minor incident" and said the refinery remains operational and "continues to produce on-spec refined petroleum products". The TNP has been the target of repeated oil theft, vandalism and sabotage in the past. As part of the state of emergency in Rivers State, President Tinubu appointed a former chief of the navy as the state's sole administrator for the next six months, but this is subject to the approval of the national legislature, which is expected later today. A Renaissance Africa source said its drilling operations in Rivers State have continued uninterrupted, while an energy lawyer based in the state's capital Port Harcourt told Argus that government and private business in the city have continued as normal. It is too early to say if and to what extent the pipeline incident has impacted Nigeria's crude output. Production of the Bonny Light crude grade fell by 14pc on the month to 210,000 b/d in February, according to upstream regulator NUPRC. Renaissance Africa said a TNP joint investigation visit, led by NUPRC, is scheduled for today. By Adebiyi Olusolape Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Find out more
News

Australia's Arafura secures new NdPr oxide offtake deal


20/03/25
News
20/03/25

Australia's Arafura secures new NdPr oxide offtake deal

Sydney, 20 March (Argus) — Australian producer Arafura Rare Earth will supply between 100-300 t/yr of neodymium-praseodymium (NdPr) oxide to Dutch trader Traxys Europe, bringing the company closer to its offtake target of 3,552 t/yr. Arafura has agreed to supply at least 100 t/yr of NdPr oxide to Traxys for five years, but can choose to sell up to 300 t/yr of the material. The deal is priced in terms of NdPr ex-works China prices, the company said on 20 March. Arafura indicated that it planned to link offtake deals to equity agreements , it said in an investor call in January. But the offtake deal with Traxys does not appear to include an equity component. Arafura is currently developing the 4,400 t/yr Nolans project, a combined mine and NdPr refinery in Western Australia (WA). The company is aiming to secure offtake deals accounting for 80pc of the project's capacity. German manufacturer Siemens has already agreed to buy 520 t/yr of NdPr from Arafura, with South Korean firms Hyundai and Kia taking an additional 1,500 t/yr of the material. Arafura has committed to sell 2,320 t/yr of oxide from the Nolans project since 2023. Arafura is continuing to negotiate offtake agreements with Asian, European, and US consumers. Firms have expressed interest in buying up to 4,740 t/yr of NdPr oxide from the company, beyond the 2,320 t/yr already committed to customers and above Nolans' production capacity. The rare earth developer has received extensive government support on its Nolans project. Australia's federal Labor government agreed to invest A$200mn ($126mn) into the project in mid-January. It previously committed A$840mn to the project in March 2024. But Arafura is not alone. Australian officials have backed other rare earths projects over recent years, including Iluka Resources' Eneabba refinery in WA. Argus ' praseodymium-neodymium oxide min 99pc fob China price has been rising over the last three months. The price reached $61,850/t on 19 March, when it was last assessed, up from $54,500/t three months earlier. By Avinash Govind Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

Canberra backs Li battery projects in Western Australia


20/03/25
News
20/03/25

Canberra backs Li battery projects in Western Australia

Sydney, 20 March (Argus) — Australia's federal government will partly underwrite four lithium-ion battery projects in Western Australia (WA), boosting the state's energy storage capacity by 2.6GWh from late 2027. Canberra is supporting the projects through its Capacity Investment Scheme (CIS), which sets a revenue floor on big battery projects for up to 15 years. The government has not revealed the specific revenue floors linked to the newly underwritten projects. Australian renewable energy developer PGS Energy will build the largest of the four newly-underwritten batteries, a 1.2GWh energy storage system in Marradong. The company's Marradong battery will be co-located with a solar farm and connected to WA's South West Interconnected System (Swis), a grid stretching across its most populous regions, once it becomes operational. French energy producer Neoen is also developing a 615MWh project just outside Perth, under the scheme. The company has been building large batteries across Australia, with public support, for multiple years. Its Collie Battery Energy Storage System is connected to Swis, and has been storing and discharging 877MWh of energy since October 2024. The two other batteries underwritten on 20 March are smaller, with a combined capacity of 780MWh, and located in rural parts of the state. The Australian government's latest funding announcement comes just months after it on 11 December 2024 underwrote eight other Australian battery projects capable of storing 3.6GWh of power under the CIS. Those projects were scattered across the country, covering three states but excluding WA. Canberra will also underwrite another set of batteries, with a combined capacity of 16GWh, in September. Over 100 projects, with a combined capacity of 135GWh, have applied to be part of CIS' September funding round. By Avinash Govind Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

Australia must rethink gas strategy: Grattan


20/03/25
News
20/03/25

Australia must rethink gas strategy: Grattan

Sydney, 20 March (Argus) — Grattan's Orange Book 2025: Policy priorities for the federal government report suggests redesigning Canberra's future gas strategy, coordinating a shift away from gas for households and some industries while changing market control mechanisms. Australia's next federal government must act to address a shortfall of gas in the country's southeastern states by creating a demand response mechanism for the national gas market and bringing together stakeholders to permit initial LNG imports in mid-2026, according to Grattan. Australia has always been both an exporter and importer of LPG, proving it is possible to build infrastructure to ship gas to the nation's south for the next 3-4 years in line with expected shortfalls, director of Grattan's energy program Tony Wood told a Sydney forum on 19 March. Building or expanding gas pipelines would be expensive and inefficient as the nation decarbonises, Wood said, with less gas forecast to be used as Australia targets net zero emissions by 2050. Canberra should institute a working group involving producers, users, traders, terminal owners, governments and the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission — which reports on market supply — to achieve seasonal imports of LNG in winter months, according to the Grattan report. A rule change to create a demand response mechanism akin to that under national electricity market rules would assist in meeting small shortfalls, such as during severe weather or unexpected supply outages. Demand is expected to rise on the back the closure of coal-fired power stations in the 2030s, according to Canberra's future gas strategy released in 2024. Gas-fired power demand may double in the decade to 2043 because of the need to support a solar and wind-heavy grid. This requires a reworking of the future gas strategy to specify plans to reduce demand and clarify future gas requirements outside of power generation, Grattan's report said. Assistance for households and industries to electrify processes is also needed, together with optimising infrastructure to ensure residual users in power generation and industry can access gas supply. The main controls on east coast gas grids, the Australian Domestic Gas Security Mechanism (ADGSM) and code of conduct , should be revised to allow for interstate transfers of gas, Grattan said, likely from Queensland's Gladstone-based LNG projects to the southern states. The code of conduct, which mandates an A$12/GJ ($8/GJ) price on domestic gas, came into effect in 2023 amid booming global gas prices but must be reviewed in 2025. Australia's energy and climate change ministerial council met on 14 March but declined to decide on expanding the Australian Energy Market Operator's powers, to enable it to address the gas shortage possibly through underwriting LNG import terminals. More analysis will be commissioned ahead of a decision at the next meeting in mid-2025. By Tom Major Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

Mosaic optimistic about output, future demand


19/03/25
News
19/03/25

Mosaic optimistic about output, future demand

Houston, 19 March (Argus) — US fertilizer producer Mosaic is hopeful its output this year will exceed 2024 levels as it plans to enhance its capacity to meet anticipated demand growth. Mosaic expects phosphate and potash global demand to individually exceed 80mn metric tonnes (t) by the end of the decade, with phosphate's demand increase to be limited by a lack of adequate global supply. For phosphate, that would represent an uptick of 7mn t of demand while for potash that would represent an increase of nearly 9mn t. Mosaic referenced biofuel demand, feed use, and food use as the main pillars of agriculture commodity demand growth. There are a handful of factors expected to drive demand growth for phosphate and potash, such as population growth and an increase in the usage of the phosphate molecule in the industrial sector, the producer said in its analyst day presentation. Executive vice president Jenny Wang pointed out the downward trend in Chinese phosphate exports. The country in recent years exported roughly 10mn t, but that level has dropped to around 7mn-8mn t as it focuses on meeting domestic demand first. Mosaic expects annual Chinese phosphate exports to continue to drop by at least another 2mn t, while global phosphate demand growth from 2025-2030 is expected to increase by at least 2pc, which would further tighten global supply. The producer also did not shy away from detailing its loss of 700,000t of phosphate production last year from the plethora of hurricanes and winter storms that swept through the US Gulf. Vice president Karen Swager said if the 700,000t of phosphate had been included in the annual output tonnage, the overall 2024 production rate would have surpassed 2023, and therefore 2025's phosphate output should show an uptick. Mosaic last year produced roughly 6.3mn t of phosphate. It expects to produce between 7.2mn-7.6mn t this year and nearly 8.2mn t by 2026. "As we ramp our production up, we will lower our unit costs because a lot of our costs are fixed," Swager said. The producer has also been installing new technology at its Canadian mines that should lead to an 8pc increase in its 2025 potash output compared with 2024 levels, which were lowered by 250,000t because of electrical mine issues . Mosaic anticipates 2025 production to total between 8.9mn-9.1mn t and should near 9.2mn t by 2027. "Better operating efficiency will unlock value that enables us to grow high margin areas of the business, and invest less in the areas that aren't generating those type of returns," president Bruce Bodine said. By Taylor Zavala Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Generic Hero Banner

Business intelligence reports

Get concise, trustworthy and unbiased analysis of the latest trends and developments in oil and energy markets. These reports are specially created for decision makers who don’t have time to track markets day-by-day, minute-by-minute.

Learn more