Fed
rate hike in June 'on the table,' two policymakers say
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[May 02, 2015]
By Ann Saphir and Jonathan Spicer
ORANGE, Calif./PHILADELPHIA (Reuters) -
The Federal Reserve could well raise interest rates as soon as June, two
top U.S. central bankers said on Friday, so long as economic data
strengthens as expected from a dismal first quarter.
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That view - from the hawkish-leaning chief of the Cleveland Fed and
from the centrist head of the San Francisco Fed - is at odds with
the view of many traders, whose bets in the interest-rate futures
markets suggest they have all but discounted a June rate hike and
now expect the Fed to wait until December before raising rates for
the first time since 2006.
The Fed has kept interest rates near zero since December 2008.
The key, both Loretta Mester, president of the Cleveland Fed, and
John Williams, president of the San Francisco Fed, said, is that by
a quirk of the calendar there will be two more months of data for
many of the key gauges the Fed follows, including the U.S. jobless
rate, jobs gains, retail sales and others.
All scheduled Fed policy meetings, including the next one, in June,
are "on the table," Mester told reporters in Philadelphia. "There
are a whole bunch of data releases that will come out between now
and June. But to me the employment reports will be indicative of a
lot."
The U.S. economy's weak winter performance, including near-zero
growth in gross domestic product, has pushed back market
expectations for a policy tightening to September or December, when
key Fed meetings are also scheduled.
Yet the Fed has telegraphed a rate hike this year, and unemployment,
at 5.5 percent, is not too far from what many economists believe
represents full employment.
"I agree with the way my colleague Loretta Mester put it," Williams
told reporters after a speech at Chapman University, repeating
Mester's phrase that all meetings are "on the table."
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"Really positive data trends, improvement in the labor market, signs
that improve the confidence and the expectation that inflation will
move back to 2 percent - I mean could imagine that constellation of
data coming in, whether before June or meetings right after that
too," Williams said. "But that would require the data to be good."
Both Mester and Williams pointed to recent data showing inflation
may be firming, suggested they are gaining confidence it is heading
toward the Fed's 2 percent target.
Looking beyond the Fed's first rate hike, Williams said the U.S.
central bank should put some "space" between the start of policy
normalization and the decision to allow the Fed's giant balance
sheet to shrink.
(Reporting by Ann Saphir and Jonathan Spicer; Editing by Leslie
Adler)
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