East Bay Times

Interest rate cuts are likely to be delayed

Powell says reductions might not take place until later in the year

- By Ben Casselman and Jim Tankersley

The Federal Reserve is likely to wait longer than initially expected to cut interest rates given stubborn inflation readings in recent months, the central bank's top two officials said Tuesday.

Policymake­rs came into 2024 looking for evidence that inflation was continuing to cool rapidly, as it did late last year. Instead, progress on inflation has stalled or even reversed by some measures.

“The recent data have clearly not given us greater confidence and instead indicate that it's likely to take longer than expected to achieve that confidence,” Jerome Powell, the Fed chair, said at an event in Washington on Tuesday. He did not say when he believed rate cuts would be appropriat­e.

In a separate speech Tuesday, Philip Jefferson, the Fed's vice chair, said the central bank should be prepared to delay rate cuts if inflation remains hot. But he stopped short of saying he expected rates will need to stay at their current levels, 5.3%, deep into this year. Last month, Fed officials indicated that they expect to cut rates three times by the end of 2024.

Investors have closely watched Fed officials in recent weeks for any hint of changing views on when rate cuts might begin. When the year began, Wall Street analysts expected officials to begin cutting rates in quarter-point increments as early as this spring. That's because annual inflation had been falling steadily from a high of about 9% to about 3%, closing in on the Fed's target.

Now, investors have pushed out expectatio­ns for a first rate cut to September, with a cut at the central bank's meeting in July seen as a coin toss.

In the first months of this year, progress on inflation has stalled. Annual inflation, as measured by the consumer price index, ticked up to 3.5% in March. The measure preferred by the Fed, the personal consumptio­n expenditur­e price index, was up 2.7% in February from a year earlier.

Other economic indicators have remained strong. Job growth has consistent­ly exceeded expectatio­ns, the unemployme­nt rate has remained low and consumer spending has proved resilient. That has given policymake­rs confidence that they can keep interest rates higher without threatenin­g to cause a recession.

“My baseline outlook continues to be that inflation will decline further, with the policy rate held steady at its current level, and that the labor market will remain strong, with labor de

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