Federal Reserve officials get to voice their outlook this week on the future path of interest rates along with the impact that tariffs and Middle East turmoil will have on the economy.
While any immediate movement on interest rates seems improbable, the policy meeting, which concludes Wednesday, will feature important signals that still could move markets.
Among the biggest things to watch will be whether Federal Open Market Committee members stick with their previous forecast of two rate cuts this year, how they see inflation trending, and any reaction from Chair Jerome Powell to what has become a concerted White House campaign for easier monetary policy.
"The Fed's main message at the June meeting will be that it remains comfortably in wait-and-see mode," Bank of America economist Aditya Bhave said in a note. BofA thinks the Fed won't cut at all this year but will leave open the possibility for one reduction. "Investors should focus on Powell's take on the softening labor data, the recent benign inflation prints and the risks of persistent tariff-driven inflation."
The committee's "dot plot" grid of individual members' rate expectations will be front and center for investors.
At the last update in March, the committee indicated the equivalent of two quarter percentage point reductions this year, which is in line with current market pricing. However, that was a close call, and just two participants changing their approach would swing the median forecast down to one cut.
The meeting comes against a complicated geopolitical backdrop in which the impact of President Donald Trump's tariffs on inflation has been minimal so far but unclear for the future. At the same time, Trump and other administration officials have stepped up their urging of the Fed to lower rates.
On top of that, the Israel-Iran conflict threatens to destabilize the global energy picture, providing yet another variable through which to navigate policy.
"We expect Chair Powell to repeat his message from the May press conference," Bhave said. "Policy is in a good place and there is no hurry for the Fed to act."
Source: CNBC
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