Federal Reserve officials are taking note of what they see as rising inflation risks and the uncertain impact of President Donald Trump's trade, immigration and other policies.
On Thursday, several signaled they still feel that cooling U.S. inflation will in time allow the U.S. central bank to deliver further interest rate cuts; one said that current conditions call for holding rates steady, and gave no indication of when, or whether, she felt cuts would be needed.
"Going forward, I consider it is appropriate to hold the federal funds rate in place for some time, given the balance of risks that we face right now," Federal Reserve Governor Adriana Kugler said on Thursday.
Inflation still has "some way to go" before reaching the Fed's 2% target, she said, and while the labor market is healthy and the risk of it weakening has diminished, upside risks to inflation remain.
As for Trump's policies, she said, the net effect will depend on the specifics.
Since taking office on January 20, Trump has delivered a steady stream of actions - or threats of them - to impose tariffs on goods from key U.S. trading partners, including China, Mexico and Canada.
Still unknown, Kugler and her fellow policymakers point out, is how broad and big they will end up being, whether other countries will respond with their own taxes on U.S. exports, and to what degree consumers rather than intermediaries will bear the cost.
And while for now it appears tariffs could potentially push up prices, it is not clear by how much, she said, adding, "we will have to wait."
Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic said his "baseline expectation" is for two quarter-percentage-point rate cuts later this year, but "the uncertainty around that is pretty significant ... There's a lot that could happen that could influence that in both directions."
Bostic, who is not a voting member of the Fed's rate-setting committee this year, told reporters in a call he did not think the U.S. economy is facing a new burst of inflation, and noted that a still-low 4% unemployment rate shows the labor market is healthy.
But there is, he said, both enthusiasm and "widespread apprehension" among businesses about how new import taxes, immigration rules, and changes to regulations will affect the outlook.
"In a nutshell, contacts are concerned that tariffs could increase costs," Bostic said. "Many feel confident that if that happens, then they can pass along higher costs in their prices."
Inflation already is proving more sticky, and its progress toward the Fed's 2% target more bumpy, than many had expected. Consumer prices increased 3% on a year-over-year basis in January, the fastest pace since last June.
The Fed held its benchmark interest rate in the 4.25%-4.50% range at a policy meeting last month and is expected to do so again at its March 18-19 gathering, as officials wait for more clarity on how the administration's new policies affect the economy. Financial markets are now pricing in just one Fed rate cut this year, in June at the earliest.
NEAR-TERM INFLATION EXPECTATIONS
St. Louis Fed President Alberto Musalem sees the coming policy shifts as increasing the risk that inflation could stall above the central bank's 2% target, or move higher, requiring it to stay on hold for longer and, in a worst-case scenario if the job market also weakens, be forced to choose between fighting inflation with higher rates or cushioning the economy with easier policy.
Musalem, who spoke to the Economic Club of New York, did not lay out his baseline expectation for the number of rate cuts likely to be appropriate this year, though he did say the policy rate should be reduced once "inflation convergence" to the Fed's 2% goal is assured.
"Market and some survey measures indicate that near-term expectations of inflation have risen notably over the past three months," Musalem said. If inflation does get stuck at current above-target levels or expectations do rise, "a more restrictive path of monetary policy relative to the baseline path might be appropriate."
Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee, typically among the more dovish of the central bank's policymakers, said that before the recent policy and geopolitical uncertainties, overall inflation "looked pretty good" and was down substantially from its mid-2022 peak.
The tariffs that Trump imposed during his first term did not have a material impact on inflation, Goolsbee said, in part because they were narrower and included enough exemptions that supply networks were not affected.
But in thinking about the more broad-based and higher tariffs currently in development by Trump, "it depends on how many countries they are going to apply to and how big are they going to be. And the more it looks like a COVID-sized shock, the more nervous you should be about that.
Source: Investing.Com
President Donald Trump said Wednesday he plans to send a single letter to over 150 countries outlining the tariff rate they will face, saying, "It's all going to be the same for everyone, for that gro...
The U.S. central bank will probably need to leave interest rates where they are for a while longer to ensure inflation stays low in the face of upward pressure from the Trump administration's tariffs,...
US President Donald Trump plans to impose tariffs of over 10% on smaller countries, including nations in Africa and the Caribbean, as the Associated Press reported. "We'll probably set one tariff for...
President Donald Trump warned on Monday that he would impose secondary tariffs of 100% on Russia if a peace deal with Ukraine isn't reached within 50 days. "We are going to be doing very severe tariff...
The European Union announced on Sunday that it will extend its suspension of countermeasures to U.S. tariffs until early August, aiming to pursue a negotiated settlement. This comes after President T...
The U.S. dollar slipped against the euro on Friday but held on to weekly gains, as investors weighed expected Federal Reserve policy amid signs that tariffs may be starting to increase some inflation pressures and as U.S. President Donald Trump...
Former U.S. President Donald Trump threatened to impose tariffs on members of the BRICS group of nations on Friday, warning the alliance would quickly collapse if it ever becomes a significant economic force. "When I heard about this group from...
Stocks in the US closed near the flatline on Friday as investors weighed President Trump's push for higher tariffs on the European Union against strong economic data and corporate earnings. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 finished mostly muted near...
The Producer Price Index (PPI) for final demand in the US rose 2.3% annually in June, according to data published by the US Bureau of Labor...
The U.S. central bank will probably need to leave interest rates where they are for a while longer to ensure inflation stays low in the face of...
Unemployment claims fell 7,000 to 221,000 in the week ending July 12, compared with the median estimate of 233,000, according to Labor Department...
Asia-Pacific markets fell after U.S. President Donald Trump said Tuesday that he had struck a preliminary trade agreement with Indonesia, which will...