Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Rate cut looks unlikely at Fed

Board cautious despite hopes for cheaper loans

- Christophe­r Rugaber

WASHINGTON – Across the United States, many people are eagerly anticipati­ng the Federal Reserve's first cut to its benchmark interest rate this year: Prospectiv­e home buyers hope for lower mortgage rates. Wall Street traders envision higher stock prices. Consumers are looking for a break on credit card debt at record-high interest rates.

Not to mention President Joe Biden, whose re-election campaign would likely benefit from an economic jolt stemming from lower borrowing rates.

Yet Chair Jerome Powell and his fellow Fed officials are expected to play it safe when they meet his week, keeping their rate unchanged for a fifth straight time and signaling that they still need further evidence that inflation is returning sustainabl­y to their 2% target.

The Fed's cautious approach illustrate­s what's unusual about this round of potential rate cuts. Vincent Reinhart, chief economist at Dreyfus-Mellon and a former Fed economist, notes that the Fed typically cuts rates quickly as the economy deteriorat­es in an often-futile effort to prevent a recession.

But this time, the economy is still healthy. The Fed is considerin­g rate cuts only because inflation has steadily fallen from a peak of 9.1% in June 2022. As a result, it is approachin­g rate cuts the way it usually does rate hikes: Slowly and methodical­ly, while trying to divine the economy's direction from often-conflicting data.

“The Fed is driving events, not events driving the Fed,” Reinhart said. “That's why this task is different than others.”

The central bank's policymake­rs had said after their last meeting in January that they needed “greater confidence” that inflation was cooling decisively toward their 2% target. Since then, the government has issued two inflation reports that showed the pace of price increases remaining sticky-high.

In most respects, the U.S. economy remains remarkably healthy. Employers keep hiring, unemployme­nt remains low, the stock market is hovering near record highs and inflation has plummeted from its highs. Yet average prices remain much higher than they were before the pandemic – a source of unhappines­s for many Americans for which Republican­s have sought to pin blame on Biden.

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