Mint Hyderabad

Powell dials back expectatio­ns on rate cuts

- Nick Timiraos feedback@livemint.com © 2024 DOW JONES & CO. INC.

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said firm inflation during the first quarter had introduced new uncertaint­y over when and whether the central bank would be able to lower interest rates later this year.

“The recent data have clearly not given us greater confidence” that inflation is making progress to the Fed’s goal “and instead indicate that it is likely to take longer than expected to achieve that confidence,” Powell said Tuesday at a moderated question-andanswer session in Washington.

Central bank officials started the year with guarded optimism that they would be able to cut interest rates several times beginning around midyear after inflation dropped more rapidly than they had anticipate­d at the end of 2023.

In December, Powell had pivoted from focusing on whether the Fed would need to raise rates again to when the central bank might be in a position to lower them. Market participan­ts raced ahead and began anticipati­ng a string of six or seven rate cuts, puzzling Fed leaders who didn’t think such exuberant expectatio­ns were aligned with their own outlook.

Still, Fed leaders, including Powell, maintained up through early this month that rate cuts were likely to be appropriat­e, even after economic activity and hiring had proven more resilient than expected.

That kept front-and-center the possibilit­y that officials would take back some of last year’s rate increases and shore up the prospects of a so-called economic soft landing.

Even President Biden, who had mostly avoided commenting on the Fed, joined in on the rate-cut guessing game, declaring shortly after his State of the Union address in March that the “little outfit” that sets rates might be lowering them soon. At their meeting in March, most Fed officials projected two or three rate cuts this year would be appropriat­e, with a narrow majority penciling in at least three cuts.

But reality has dealt the Fed and the White House a different hand, at least so far. Because inflation was firmer than anticipate­d in the first three months of the year, investors and central bank officials are coming to grips with the idea that the Fed will have to defer rate cuts, raising the risk that reductions won’t occur until the economy shows more obvious signs of weakening.

The consumer-price index, released last week by the Labor Department, showed core inflation in March was 3.8% from a year earlier. That broke a yearlong streak in which the 12-month change had declined in each month.

Core inflation excludes volatile food and energy prices, and economists treat it as a better gauge of underlying price pressures.

The Fed’s preferred gauge, which will be released next week by the Commerce Department, is likely to show core prices rose 2.8% in March from a year earlier, the same as in February, according to estimates by Fed economists. The Fed targets 2% inflation over time.

After last week’s CPI report, most analysts on Wall Street changed their forecasts, scrapping expectatio­ns of a June rate cut. They see the Fed waiting until July, September or December to start lowering rates, and they expect just one or two cuts this year.

At their meeting in March, most Fed officials projected two or three rate cuts this year would be appropriat­e

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell says recent data have clearly not given the central bank greater confidence.
BLOOMBERG Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell says recent data have clearly not given the central bank greater confidence.
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