The Borneo Post

Fed to hold fire despite White House call for rate cut

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WASHINGTON: The Federal Reserve is poised to hold its fire, leaving benchmark US interest rates untouched as central bankers await firm indication­s of where the world’s largest economy is headed.

But as policymake­rs gather for their third meeting of the year on Tuesday, President Donald Trump is still hammering the Fed, demanding they lower interest rates. He also made plans to fill Fed vacancies with political loyalists to help get his way.

Top White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow said Friday the surprising­ly strong growth in the first quarter of the year could “open the door to a target rate reduction in the months ahead” – though he hastened to add that he respected the Fed’s independen­ce.

In addition, inflation “is coming in way below their own benchmark,” he told CNBC, referring to the central bank’s two per cent target, while its mostwatche­d measure has remained stubbornly slow, coming in at 1.3 per cent in the first quarter of the year.

Fed Chairman Jerome Powell has steadfastl­y defended the central bank’s independen­ce, and made it clear officials will base their decisions on economic data.

After four increases in the benchmark lending rate in 2018, the Fed has signaled clearly it would not raise rates this year. Given the strength of recent data reports, a rate cut could seem counterint­uitive.

But some economists still think the next move will be a cut.

The minutes from last month’s policy meeting show members of the rate- setting Federal Open Market Committee believed their policy stance could “shift in either direction,” at least raising the possibilit­y of a rate cut at some point.

Futures markets appear convinced the FOMC will feel compelled to lower rates at least once in the next nine months, and as of Friday odds were at 20 per cent it will cut as soon as June.

In recent media interviews, Richard Clarida, the Fed’s vice chairman, and Charles Evans, president of the Chicago Federal Reserve Bank, acknowledg­ed rate cuts could become necessary.

But with Wall Street hovering at record levels unemployme­nt below four per cent and job creation holding steady, economists say that for the moment the central bank is sticking with the pause announced in December.

Ian Shepherdso­n of Pantheon Macroecono­mics said Friday the blockbuste­r first- quarter GDP could put rate hikes “back on the agenda” if it continues through the year.

But other economists said the 3.2 per cent growth recorded in the January to March period hid worrisome signs of weakness, such as falling imports, weak consumptio­n, rising inventorie­s and poor business investment.

Diane Swonk, chief economist at Grant Thornton, told AFP the GDP estimate was “a lousy three per cent” that masked warning signs in its details and came amid perpetuall­y soft inflation.

In March, a closely watched measure of consumer inflation hit its slowest pace in 13 months. And the Fed’s preferred gauge, the “core” Personal Consumptio­n Expenditur­es price index, has not exceeded the Fed’s two per cent target in seven years.

“The reality is that once inflation started to recede, even though the economy’s stronger, something’s wrong,” Swonk said.

Though unemployme­nt is low and wages have begun to rise, she said, price pressures simply have not responded, leaving the Fed with little impetus to push its target interest rate range any higher. — AFP

 ??  ?? The Federal Reserve is poised to hold its fire, leaving benchmark US interest rates untouched as central bankers await firm indication­s of where the world’s largest economy is headed. — AFP photo
The Federal Reserve is poised to hold its fire, leaving benchmark US interest rates untouched as central bankers await firm indication­s of where the world’s largest economy is headed. — AFP photo

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