Fed officials flag further hikes even after holding steady
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[September 23, 2023] By
Howard Schneider and Ann Saphir
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. Federal Reserve officials warned on Friday of
further rate hikes even after voting to hold the benchmark federal funds
rate steady at a meeting this week, with three policymakers saying they
remain uncertain the inflation battle is finished.
Their comments were tempered by words like "patience," and an
acknowledgement that price increases have been slowing.
But in the first public comments since the central bank this week agreed
to hold its benchmark rate steady in a range of from 5.25% to 5.50%, the
emphasis was on the possibility that rates may still rise, and on the
fact that monetary policy will likely remain tight longer than
previously expected.
"Inflation is still too high, and I expect it will likely be appropriate
for the (Federal Open Market) Committee to raise rates further and hold
them at a restrictive level for some time to return inflation to our 2%
goal in a timely way," Fed Governor Michelle Bowman said in prepared
remarks for an Independent Community Bankers of Colorado event.
"Progress on inflation is likely to be slow given the current level of
monetary policy restraint," she said, noting that in policymaker
projections issued by the Fed earlier this week inflation remains above
the 2% target "at least until the end of 2025."
A potential further rise in energy prices, she noted, was a particular
risk worth monitoring.
In separate remarks to the Maine Bankers Association, Boston Fed
President Susan Collins said a further tightening of monetary policy "is
certainly not off the table," though she also counseled "patience" as
the Fed tries to get the right signal from sometimes noisy inflation
data.
"It is too soon to be confident that inflation is on a sustainable
trajectory back to the 2% target," Collins said, with job growth still
"above trend," and elevated inflation in aspects of the service sector
still a concern.
"I expect rates may have to stay higher, and for longer, than previous
projections had suggested," said Collins.
San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly, considered among the more dovish
Fed officials, said she still needed more data to determine whether
interest rates should rise again, though she called it "prudent" for the
Fed to be patient in future rate decisions.
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U.S. Federal Reserve Governor Michelle Bowman gives her first public
remarks as a Fed policymaker at an American Bankers Association
conference in San Diego, California, U.S., February 11 2019.
REUTERS/Ann Saphir
"The thing that would be a problem is if we decided that we wanted
to call it done, we'd say we're done, we say definitely one more,
when we actually don't know," she said in an event held in
coordination with Greater Phoenix Leadership.
Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari, a voter on rate policy this
year, did not talk about his current monetary policy views during an
event at the Economic Club of Minnesota, but did say the economy
appeared to be motoring along despite the swift Fed rate hikes since
March of 2022.
"Consumer spending continues to exceed our expectations," Kashkari
said. "I would have thought with 500 basis points or 525 basis
points of interest rate increases we would have slammed the brakes
on consumer spending, and it has not."
The central bank's decision to hold its benchmark overnight interest
rate steady this week was unanimous.
Bowman said she supported it because of "mixed data" that alongside
signs of continued "solid" economic growth also included some
decline in inflation and evidence of slowing job growth. Collins and
Daly do not currently have a vote on rate policy under a Fed system
that rotates votes among the 12 Reserve Bank presidents year by
year.
New projections issued at the end of a two-day policy meeting on
Wednesday showed 12 of 19 Fed officials expect one additional
quarter point rate increase this year. The Fed has two scheduled
sessions left in 2023, concluding on Nov. 1 and Dec. 13.
More notably, officials projected that while they still expect to
begin reducing interest rates next year as inflation falls, the path
down will be slower than previously anticipated.
Though opinions are diffuse, policymakers at the median now see only
a half percentage point of rate cuts in 2024 versus the full
percentage point decline seen in their June quarterly outlook.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider and Ann Saphir; Editing by Paul Simao
and Andrea Ricci)
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