The Fed previously ruled out raising rates at the end of its two-day
meeting on Wednesday, and the chances of a hike at the June meeting,
while still on the table, have steadily decreased amid a drum-beat
of weak first-quarter economic data.
The central bank says its decision on when to raise rates will be
data-dependent and made on a meeting-by-meeting basis, a stance that
it may reaffirm on Wednesday.
Economists say September is more likely than June for the Fed's
so-called "lift-off." It has kept rates near zero since late 2008 as
part of its effort to spur the recovery from the financial crisis.
Futures traders see an even later time horizon, meaning they have
little trust in the Fed's message that it's moving ahead with plans
for what would be the first rate hike since June 2006.
The Fed faces a dilemma this week, according to Bank of America:
accommodate market expectations of a later lift-off, or "update
their communications to nudge the market in the Fed's direction."
Bank of America's rates and currencies team said on Monday it
expects the Fed to lean more to the latter option.
Futures traders put the odds of a September hike at only 25 percent,
according to CME Group's FedWatch. The Fed's median federal funds
rate estimate in December is 0.625 percent, nearly double where
futures contracts show the rate that month.
The Fed could nudge investors on Wednesday by striking a more
hawkish tone on inflation.
Stubbornly low inflation has been among the factors holding back the
Fed's lift-off plans, but U.S. consumer prices ticked higher for a
second straight month in March due in part to a rebound in energy
prices.
Fed officials say the factors behind low inflation - a drop in the
cost of oil and a rising U.S. dollar - are transitory, and believe
prices will rise once those swings level off.
"A September lift-off is the marginal favorite, but June and July
are possibilities if it becomes clear quickly that the first-quarter
slowdown was a temporary weather-related blip rather than something
more serious," Capital Economics said in a research note on Monday.
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Employers added just 126,000 workers last month, the fewest since
December 2013, breaking a 12-month streak of gains above 200,000.
Manufacturing, housing and consumer spending data also have pointed
to weakness.
The U.S. Commerce Department is scheduled to issue its first
snapshot of first-quarter GDP at 8:30 a.m. EDT (1230 GMT) on
Wednesday, with economists polled by Reuters expecting an anemic 1
percent annual rate of growth.
At the core of the Fed's struggle is whether to view the inflation
rebound as a key step forward, or to view the overall economic data
as a sign the markets are not yet ready to have the monetary policy
stimulus punch bowl taken away.
JP Morgan predicted in a note last week that the meeting will be
"relatively uneventful" and that the third paragraph in the Fed's
policy statement, where it gives its rate guidance, would remain
mostly the same as March, when the central bank said lift-off was
dependent on further improvement in the labor market and "reasonable
confidence that inflation will move back toward 2 percent over the
medium-term."
(Editing by Paul Simao)
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