Business a.m.

Fed ready to pause on interest rate increases

- Business a.m.

APAIR OF INFLU ENTIAL FED ERAL Reserve officials said last week that the central bank should pause to assess economic conditions before considerin­g additional interest rate increases, reinforcin­g the message delivered last week by the Fed chairman, Jerome H. Powell.

The Fed last week also published an account of its most recent meeting, in December, which showed that most Fed officials had already reached a similar conclusion at that time.

Taken together, the speeches and the meeting minutes signal that the Fed will not raise its benchmark interest rate at its January meeting and that it is unlikely to do so at the following meeting, in mid-March.

But most Fed officials still expect that economic growth will be strong enough to justify rate increases later in the year.

Eric Rosengren, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, told a Boston audience that the Fed was puzzling through the recent divergence between strong economic data and faltering financial markets.

“At this juncture, with two very different scenarios — economic slowdown implied by financial markets; or growth somewhat above potential G.D.P. growth, consistent with economic forecasts — I believe we can wait for greater clarity before adjusting policy,” he said.

Charles Evans, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, delivered a similar message in a speech Wednesday in Riverwoods, Ill. “I feel we have good capacity to wait and carefully take stock of the incoming data and other developmen­ts,” he said.

The remarks were sig-ic nificant because both men spoke in favor of the Fed’s rate increases last year, and both hold rotating votes on the Fed’s policy committee.

James Bullard, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, who opposed the rate increases last year, told The Wall Street Journal on Tuesday that he, too, favored a pause.

The Fed is “bordering on going too far and possibly tipping the economy into recession,” Mr. Bullard said. He added that other Fed officials were coming around to his position that the Fed should pause.

The Fed at its December meeting raised its benchmark rate into a range between 2.25 and 2.5 percent. It was the fifth consecutiv­e quarterly increase. Mr. Powell said the rate now stood near the lower end of the range that the Fed regards as neutral territory — neither encouragin­g nor discouragi­ng borrowing and economic growth.

At a news conference after the December meeting, Mr. Powell emphasized that economic growth remained strong, and that the Fed expected to continue raising rates in 2019. Investors registered their disapprova­l by driving down asset prices, exacerbati­ng a market slump.

Since then, Mr. Powell and other Fed officials have sought to deliver a more nuanced message, emphasizin­g that they are paying attention to investors’ concerns, and that the absence of inflationa­ry pressure means the Fed can afford to postpone judgment.

The account of the December meeting reinforced that message.

The Fed, according to the minutes, said that “participan­ts expressed that recent developmen­ts, including the volatility in financial markets and the increased concerns about global growth, made the appropriat­e extent and timing of future policy firming less clear than earlier.”

The Fed’s own economic outlook remains upbeat. The minutes described econom- data in the final months of 2018 as even stronger than the Fed had expected. Mr. Rosengren said consumers remained “willing to spend,” and he expected unemployme­nt would continue to fall.

Mr. Evans said he was still forecastin­g “another good year in 2019.”

But uncertaint­ies have piled up in recent months. The minutes said investors were particular­ly concerned about trade tensions between the United States and China, and about global growth.

The minutes did not mention that investors also fear that the Fed will make a mistake by raising interest rates too quickly, snuffing out the economic expansion.

The recent downturn in financial markets is both a symptom of these worries and a potential problem in its own right. Declines in invested wealth, or reductions in lending, can infect the broader economy.

The message from Fed officials is that the Fed will wait to see who is correct.

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