Fed was divided on rate cut, wanted to avoid appearing on path for more
cuts
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[August 22, 2019] By
Jason Lange
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Federal Reserve
policymakers were deeply divided over whether to cut interest rates last
month but were united in wanting to signal they were not on a preset
path to more cuts, a message not likely to sit well with U.S. President
Donald Trump.
Minutes from the two-day meeting released on Wednesday showed
policymakers' ultimate decision to lower the central bank's benchmark
interest rate by a quarter percentage point drew more opposition than
was reflected in the rate-setting panel's 8-2 vote, announced after the
meeting adjourned on July 31.
While a "couple" of participants favored a deeper cut of half a
percentage point to help lift inflation toward the Fed's target and
thwart fallout from global trade tensions, a larger number -
characterized in the minutes as "several" - favored no change at all.
The depth of the debate raises the stakes for the signal that Chairman
Jerome Powell is set to deliver on Friday at the Fed's annual policy
retreat in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. It also shows a Federal Reserve not
eager to give Trump the larger rate reductions he is demanding.
"I think the thing that surprised me was how divided they were," said
Mary Ann Hurley, vice president for fixed income trading at D.A.
Davidson in Seattle. "We're really in uncharted territory. They are
really concerned about doing or not doing the right thing."
The divisions revealed in the minutes indicate there might have been
more dissents if all participants had a vote. While Fed board governors
are permanent voters, only five of the 12 regional reserve bank
presidents have a vote at each meeting.
At the same time, the minutes also showed broad concern among
policymakers over a global economic slowdown, trade tensions and
sluggish inflation.
Since that meeting, the Fed has come under increasing pressure to cut
borrowing costs more, including a call by Trump on Wednesday for the Fed
to slash its benchmark rate.
However, Fed policymakers agreed at their July 30-31 meeting that they
did not want to give the impression they were planning more rate cuts.
"Participants generally favored an approach in which policy would be
guided by incoming information ... and that avoided any appearance of
following a preset course," according to the minutes.
KEEPING FLEXIBLE
U.S. stocks held on to session gains after the minutes were released,
with the benchmark S&P 500 Index <.SPX> up about 0.77% on the day.
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Federal Reserve Chair
Jerome Powell holds a news conference following the Federal
Reserve's two-day Federal Open Market Committee Meeting in
Washington, U.S., July 31, 2019. REUTERS/Sarah Silbiger/File Photo
"The Fed clearly wants to be flexible. They are clearly worried about some of
the global tensions that are out there, whether it is trade or Brexit or some of
those international developments," said Willie Delwiche, investment strategist
at Baird in Milwaukee.
Yields on longer-dated U.S. Treasury securities rose after the minutes were
published. The 10-year note yield climbed to 1.58%, while the 30-year bond rose
further above the key 2% level, last trading at 2.06%. It fell below 2% for the
first time ever last week as diminishing expectations for U.S. economic growth
fueled demand for safe assets.
The dollar strengthened against the safe-have yen and Swiss franc.
The comments on Wednesday by Trump, who has repeatedly criticized the Federal
Reserve's policies, come as he seeks to downplay worries that a trade war
between the United States and China could weigh on the U.S. economy and trigger
a possible recession before the November 2020 presidential election.
Minneapolis Federal Reserve Bank President Neel Kashkari, who does not have a
vote on the Fed's monetary policy committee this year but participates in policy
discussions, urged the Fed on Wednesday to use pledges about future policy,
known in central banking as "forward guidance," to boost the economy.
The July 30-31 policy meeting also included discussion of the Fed's research
into potential changes to its approach to setting policy. A number of
policymakers said the Fed could have been more aggressive in using bond
purchases to fight the 2007-09 recession.
However, policymakers also said tools like bond purchases and forward guidance
might not be enough to eliminate the risk of policy being hampered in the future
when the Fed's benchmark rate gets close to zero.
(Reporting by Jason Lange; Additional reporting by Lewis Krauskopf and Karen
Brettell in New York; Editing by Andrea Ricci)
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