Fed policymakers to sit tight on rates, debate if more is needed
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[September 09, 2023] By
Ann Saphir
(Reuters) - Ahead of their policy-setting meeting this month, Federal
Reserve policymakers have been pretty clear about two things: They are
not itching to raise interest rates, but few among them are ready to
declare victory, either.
The U.S. central bank has lifted its policy rate by 5.25 percentage
points over the last 18 months, raising the cost of borrowing for
households and businesses to temper demand and cool what had been
40-year high inflation.
Those higher rates have begun to bite: Job growth has slowed, and
inflation in the last couple of months has come down sharply, hitting
3.3% by the Fed's preferred measure in July, down from 7% last summer.
And for now, even the Fed's more hawkish policymakers are content to let
the data play out, even as they monitor whether surprisingly strong
consumer spending and a still-tight labor market could feed inflationary
pressures.
"Another skip could be appropriate when we meet later this month,"
Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan said late on Thursday. "My base case,
though, is that there is work left to do."
Logan was among the last of Fed policymakers to speak before they begin
a week and a half of public silence in the lead-up to their Sept. 19-20
policy-setting meeting.
And while fellow policymakers hold a range of views, none have pushed
back strongly against broad financial market expectations the Fed will
leave its policy rate in the current target range of 5.25%-5.5% at that
meeting.
"We can just sit" and wait to see if inflation continues to trend
downward, the usually hawkish Fed Governor Chris Waller said earlier
this week.
DATA AND FORECASTS
Fresh Fed forecasts to be published at the close of this month's meeting
will show how policymakers as a group expect inflation and unemployment
to behave, and whether they like Logan think further tightening is
likely to be needed.
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The U.S. Federal Reserve building in Washington, D.C./File Photo
In June, the last time the Fed published economic projections,
two-thirds of Fed policymakers indicated they thought rates would
need to rise to above 5.5% by year's end in order to bring inflation
down sustainably to the Fed's 2% goal.
"It's still an open question as we go forward: Have we got
sufficiently restrictive to achieve that," New York Fed President
John Williams said on Thursday.
Williams, like others, said he's watching the data closely to guide
policy. Chief among data to be released before the upcoming meeting
is a read on the Labor Department's Consumer Price Index next
Wednesday, which is expected to show inflation by this measure
having ticked up to 3.6% last month due largely to higher gas
prices.
Underlying price pressures, however, likely continued to cool,
according to a Reuters poll of economists.
Other data expected next week include retail sales and the Producer
Price Index, neither of which are expected to challenge progress
towards what Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee calls the "golden
path" of slowing inflation without a recession.
Still, rate-setters are on the lookout for potholes, including a
potential autoworkers strike that could, Goolsbee says, have a
material impact on policy.
On the other side of the ledger, unexpectedly strong data in coming
weeks and months could firm up the case for another rate hike before
the end of the year. Financial markets are currently pricing in
about a 40% chance of that.
(Reporting by Ann Saphir and Michael S. Derby; Editing by Andrea
Ricci)
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