Kuwait Times

Fed’s inflation fight remains on track: Powell

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The recent rise in US inflation hasn’t stalled the Federal Reserve’s ongoing fight against rising prices, Fed chair Jerome Powell said Friday, shortly after the publicatio­n of fresh government data. Powell spoke shortly after the Commerce Department released data showing the Fed’s favored inflation gauge rose at an annual rate of 2.5 percent in February, up 0.1 percentage points from a month earlier.

But so-called “core” inflation, a closely-watched measure that strips out volatile food and energy costs, eased slightly. “The report that came out this morning is pretty much in line with our expectatio­ns,” Powell told a conference in San Francisco, adding that the US central bank remained on track to hit its long-term inflation target of two percent. He said that while the recent inflation data were higher than the Fed would have liked, the February figures were “definitely more along the lines of what we want to see.”

“We didn’t overreact to the good data we had the second half of last year,” he said. “And you won’t hear us overreacti­ng to these two months that are higher.” Powell also addressed the question of where interest rates could settle over the longer term, suggesting they were unlikely to return to the historic lows seen after the 2008 global financial crisis. “We don’t really know where rates are going to go back to when this whole thing is over,” he said.

The US central bank’s favored measure of inflation edged higher last month on the back of rising fuel prices, according to government data published Friday, but another gauge stripping out volatile food and energy prices continued to ease.

The personal consumptio­n expenditur­es (PCE) price index rose at an annual rate of 2.5 percent in February, up 0.1 percentage points from a month earlier, the Commerce Department said in a statement. The figure was in line with the median forecasts in a survey of economists conducted by Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal.

US financial markets were closed for the Good Friday holiday. Goods prices rose 0.5 percent last month, while the costs of services increased by 0.3 percent. Much of the February increase in the cost of goods came from energy prices, which rose 2.3 percent from January on the back of a range of factors, including a recent decision by the OPEC+ alliance to extend daily supply cutbacks through the end of June. On a monthly basis, PCE inflation eased slightly from January, rising by 0.3 percent. — AFP

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