New
York Fed President William Dudley, quoted in the Financial
Times, said, "It would not shock me if we decided to lift off in
September, or it wouldn't shock me if the data were a little
softer and it caused us to wait."
Dudley, a dovish policymaker who is a close ally of Fed Chair
Janet Yellen, was said to cite recent U.S. wage gains, income,
and household spending as having improved his outlook for the
economy.
Greece, which is in a tense standoff with its European
creditors, remains a "huge wild card," he said.
"If we hit 2.5 percent growth in the second quarter and it looks
like the third quarter is shaping up for something similar, then
I think you are on a firm enough track that you would imagine
you would have made sufficient progress" in the Fed's inflation
and employment goals to raise rates "certainly by the end of the
year," Dudley was quoted as saying.
(Reporting by Jonathan Spicer; Editing by Toni Reinhold)
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