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– Dissenters Hammack, Kashkari Focus on Inflation; Muse About Possible Rate Hikes
– Williams, Others See Monetary Policy as “Well-positioned’ for Foreseeable Future
– Weight of Official Concerns Has Shifted Away from Jobs to Inflation
By Steven K. Beckner
(MaceNews) – Federal Reserve officials have given additional hints this week that the easing bias the Fed’s policymaking Federal Open Market Committee has had in place since its last 2025 interest rate cut may soon become a thing of the past.
That does not necessarily mean the FOMC is on the verge of swinging to rate hikes. Although musings about rate hikes have increased, and although the FOMC could take the intermediate step of issuing a symmetrical directive in June, preparatory to a later tightening bias, most indications are that monetary policy is firmly ensconced in the status quo.
Such are the gleanings from comments by New York Federal Reserve Bank President John Williams and a host of other policymakers in recent days.
An eventual rate cut still cannot be ruled out. If tariff and other inflationary influences fade and/or if slowing GDP growth weakens the labor market, it’s conceivable the FOMC might get back to easing.
For now, though, most officials continue to echo Chair Jerome Powell in describing policy as “well-positioned” or “in a good place” to “wait and see” how the economy responds to developments in the Middle East and elsewhere – rhetoric that points to an extended pause.
But Powell said “the center is moving toward a more neutral place” following the April 29 FOMC meeting, when three Federal Reserve bank presidents dissented in favor of dropping the easing bias. He hinted that a majority may support doing so before long.
The pending demise of the easing bias reflects the fact that risks to the Fed’s “dual mandate” have tipped to greater concern about inflation than about employment, but it would probably take a lot to provoke the FOMC to overcome its inertia and actually raise the federal funds rate, especially with Powell’s nominated successor Kevin Warsh about to take the reins.
With gasoline prices averaging $4.50 per gallon nationally on top of lingering tariff effects, Fed officials are increasingly concerned about a kind of “cost-push inflation,” even while recognizing that higher pump prices also drain disposable income and hurt consumer spending. Although hopes for a peace settlement in the Middle East have lately brought down oil prices from a peak near $126 per barrel to $94, Fed officials remain worried and unsure.
Most recently, Thursday, Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari, one of the dissenters against keeping the easing bias, described himself as “very cautious” about the outlook for inflation and said the Fed’s next rate move might need to be “up.”
Cleveland Fed President Beth Hammack, another dissenter, said Thursday her outlook is that “interest rates will be on hold for quite some time.”
Boston Fed President Susan Collins isn’t voting this year, but she too said Thursday that she would have preferred dropping the easing bias and said rates probably need to stay at current levels “for a longer time period,”
Similar sentiments were expressed earlier in the week by St. Louis Fed President Alberto Musalem, Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee and Governor Michael Barr.
When the FOMC left the funds rate in a target range of 3.5% to 3.75% on April 29, it also left unchanged its “forward guidance,” which again stated, “In considering the extent and timing of additional adjustments to the target range for the federal funds rate, the Committee will carefully assess incoming data, the evolving outlook, and the balance of risks.”
By referring to “additional adjustments,” as it had following the last of three rate cuts on Dec. 10, the FOMC leaned toward a resumption of rate cuts at some point. But after holding the funds rate steady for three straight meetings, Kashkari, Hammack and Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan dissented in favor of dropping that “easing bias” on April 29, and Powell strongly hinted the FOMC could move to more “neutral” or symmetrical forward guidance before long – perhaps at the next meeting June 16-17.
Powell said moving to symmetrical forward guidance would be a prerequisite to adopting a tightening bias, which would in turn open the door to actual rate hikes later this year if inflation remains “elevated” and the economy remains “solid.”
“A majority of us didn’t feel like we needed to send a signal on that right now,” Powell told reporters. “But maybe it will come to that. And the reason is because, you know, we’re kind of waiting to see what happens with events in the Middle East and what are the implications of those events for the U.S. economy.”
“So, there is a group who feels like we don’t need to be in a hurry to do that,” he continued. “We get it. And of course we will move to a hiking bias if we want a hike. And we’ll move to a neutral bias before that.”
Powell added, “There was a difference over whether to do it at this meeting. At a meeting at which all but one of us agree that the rate decision was correct which was not the move.“
Last Friday, all three dissenters issued special statements explaining why they felt it was “no longer appropriate” to lean toward a resumption of rate cuts given uncertainties about the economic outlook and about inflation in particular.
Logan said she was “increasingly concerned about how long it will take inflation to return all the way to the FOMC’s 2% target.”
“Even before recent increases in the prices of energy and other commodities, those (inflation) measures had been running meaningfully above 2%,” she said, adding that depending on how the Iran war and other factors affect inflation, “it could plausibly be appropriate for the FOMC’s next rate change to be either an increase or a cut.”
Kashkari and Hammack continued to defend their dissents Thursday. Despite the FOMC’s decision to keep the easing bias, the fact is that “we just didn’t know” what the next Fed move might need to be, the former said.
With inflation having exceeded target for five years, “I for one am very cautious about where inflation headed,” Kashkari told a Northern Michigan University audience, adding that “the danger is people begin to think (3% inflation) is the new normal.”
“Given the uncertainty around the Iran war, we don’t know what the future holds….,” he went on, adding that “the next move may need to be up.”
Hammack, meanwhile, said, “My outlook right now is that interest rates will be on hold for quite some time.”
“Based on what I see right now, I see a lot of uncertainty in the economic outlook” and “I think our statement should have a pretty neutral stance about whether the next move is down or up or just on hold for a really long period of time,” she said in a WOSU Radio interview.
Hammack described the labor market as relatively stable, whereas “we have been missing our 2% (inflation) objective for the past five years, and with the pressures that we see right now coming from the conflict in Iran, it could mean that those pricing pressures are going to be more persistent.”
Likewise, non-voter Collins said she was “strongly supportive” of leaving the funds rate unchanged, but would have preferred that the FOMC statement “not be as closely aligned with language that has been associated with the presumption that the next move will be a cut.”
Calling herself “agnostic” on the future rate path, she said rates are likely to remain on hold “for a longer time period, with further easing further down the road,” but added that “there are scenarios in which it would be important to strongly consider a hike.”
“It’s more the persistence of inflation that I’m focused on,” Collins said.
Earlier in the week, other officials had similar types of concerns.
Most notably, Williams said Monday that the Iran war has introduced “significant and unpredictable risks” and “heightened uncertainty” about the outlook but suggested there is no need to change monetary policy as yet, because it is already “well positioned” to deal with risks to the Fed’s dual mandate of “maximum employment” and “price stability.”
“The elevated levels of inflation, mixed signals from the labor market, and heightened uncertainty from the Middle East conflict present an unusual set of circumstances, but the current stance of monetary policy is well positioned to balance the risks to our maximum employment and price stability goals,” the FOMC Vice Chairman said, adding that “the Middle East conflict has introduced significant and unpredictable risks to economies across the globe, and it came amid what was already an uncertain and unusual environment in the U.S………..
Before the Iran war, “uncertainty stemmed from trade and other government policies,” he noted. “Those forces are still in play. Nonetheless, the U.S. economy has so far remained remarkably resilient….”
Williams said “the labor market has shown conflicting signs: Much of the hard data points to stabilization, while some of the soft data suggest continued gradual slowing …. At 4.3%, the unemployment rate has changed little over the past nine months, and payroll growth has remained low but at levels consistent with underlying labor force growth…..”
But he said, “some soft data suggest a less sanguine view” and said the labor market “bears continued close monitoring for signs that conditions are shifting.”
Like many of his colleagues, Williams sounded more concerned about inflation, saying he expects it to “remain elevated” because of continuing tariff effects and the oil price spike.
Barr usually refrains from commenting on the economy and monetary policy, but Tuesday he pointed to spillover from gasoline to other consumer prices. “The most immediate effect is a significant increase in prices, particularly for gas at the pump,” he said. “Consumers are feeling that a lot and it could bleed over into other prices.”
Musalem was blunt Wednesday in saying the balance of risks which monetary policymakers must weigh is “shifting’ toward greater concern about inflation and less about employment. He said there are “plausible scenarios” where the funds rate would need to stay where it is “for some time,” but also ones where the FOMC might need to either raise or lower it.
Musalsem simultaneously expressed heightened concern about inflation and deemphasized threats to economic growth and employment Wednesday, opening the door to eventual rate hikes.
Assessing the economy for a group of Mississippi bankers, he said that, despite Middle East uncertainties, “the tailwinds are stronger than the headwinds.” Among the tailwinds, he listed “very accommodative” financial conditions.
Musalem, who won’t be voting again until 2028, said “the labor market seems to have stabilized,” with payroll gains “at break-even” (the pace of job gains needed to keep the unemployment rate from rising) and the 4.3% unemployment rate “near the natural rate of unemployment.”
By contrast, he said inflation is running more than a percentage point over the Fed’s 2% target and said even longer term inflation expectations are “drifting up.”
So, “the risks going forward are shifting,’ Musalem said. “There are risks on both sides…, but the risks are shifting more to the inflation side than the unemployment side.”
As for what that means for monetary policy, he said “there are very plausible scenarios which would require us to keep the policy rate at the present level for some time.” At current levels, he said the funds rate is “either neutral or slightly accommodative in real terms.”
Goolsbee, who will return to the FOMC voting ranks next year, put forth another case for potential rate hikes, which ran against the grain of much Fed thinking, on Wednesday.
Some, including Warsh, have contended that accelerating productivity growth will help the economy grow faster without wage-price pressures and allow the Fed to lower interest rates. Just such a belief led the Fed to avoid rate hikes in the late 1990s under the guidance of former Chair Alan Greenspan.
But Goolsbee sharply contradicted such hopes. Far from containing inflation and enabling rate cuts, AI-driven productivity growth could well have the opposite effect, he told a Milken Institute conference.
If productivity gains cause an increase in expected future income, “it can lead to increased spending and potentially overheat the economy before the productivity boom has actually
arrived,” he warned. “In that case, the fundamentals suggest rates would need to rise…..”
“(W)e need to keep an eye on the forecasts and expectations of how much of the productivity surge is still to come,” Goolsbee said. “The bigger the hype, the more rates would need to rise to prevent overheating.“
Driving the evolution of Fed thinking has been the worrisome behavior of inflation. Though down from its 9.1% peak, inflation has been running above the Fed’s 2% target for five years, and there are signs that inflation expectations, the holy grail of monetary policy, are starting to erode. As Powell has repeatedly said, the Fed’s hope and expectation was that Trump’s tariff hikes would be just a “one-time” thing with little pass-through to other prices, but before tariffs had a chance to completely wash through the economy, the war with Iran has brought another “shock” to inflation. Soaring oil prices have pushed gasoline prices to an average $…. per gallon, and although Trump has promised they will come down when the war is over, the fear at the Fed is that higher prices at the gas pump will feed through to food and other prices. While that could have adverse effects on the “maximum employment” side of the Fed’s dual mandate, officials primary concern is what it will mean for the “price stability” side.
Last Thursday, the Commerce Department reported that its price index for Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE), the Fed’s favorite inflation gauge, rose 3.5% year-over-year in March, up from 2.8% in February. The more closely watched “core” PCE rose 3.2%, up from 3.0%..
Goolsbee called the report “bad news” and said, “”We have got to get some assurance that we are going back to the 2% inflation target,”
Fed officials have continued to call inflation expectations, at least for the longer run, “well-anchored,” but that claim has been eroding. In April, the University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment survey showed expectations for inflation over the next year surging from 3.8% to 4.7%. Consumer expectations for inflation over the next five years were less but still jumped from 3.2% to 3.5%. The New York Fed’s Survey of Consumer Expectations, which Fed officials tend to rely on more despite its shorter track record, shows stability in longer term inflation
expectations.
Hanging over future monetary policy decision making is Warsh’s pending replacement of Powell.
Warsh, President Trump’s nominee to succeed Powell when his term as chair expires May 15, has advocated lower rates in the past, and his selection was widely seen as a quid pro quo for taking that position. But the former Fed governor swore in his Senate Banking Committee confirmation that he will not be a puppet for the president.
A test of his avowed independence could some relatively soon after his presumed confirmation by the full U.S. Senate, his nomination having been approved by the Senate Banking Committee on April 29.
That could set up good theater at the June FOMC meeting, with Powell planning to stay on as a governor and with the Committee already sharply divided.
–BOJ Board Decides to Stand Pat in 6-to-3 Vote, Mulling Better Timing for Follow-Up Rate Hike
By Max Sato
(MaceNews) – Here are the key Japanese events for the coming week and a review of the holiday-shortened past week. The local markets will be closed from Monday, May 4 until Wednesday, May 6 in the second half of the Golden Week holidays.
Volatility in the foreign exchange markets during this period tends to be high in thin trading conditions but market participants may be cautious after the Ministry of Finance was suspected of firing a salvo during London trading hours (around 1700 JST/0800 GMT/0400 EDT) on Friday.
In a hurriedly arranged scrum with reporters, Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama simply said that “the timing of taking a decisive action is nearing” and declined comment on whether the MOF had actually stepped into the currency market, selling dollars for yen to prevent the yen from depreciating further and turning the tide toward a firmer yen away from the psychologically crucial level of Y160 to the U.S. currency.
Katayama chose to stay mysterious, advising reporters “to hold on to your smartphones whether you are stepping out or being asleep” and telling them that all she could say was that she had been warning about “taking a decisive action” in the foreign exchange market and that “such timing is nearing.”
Following those comments, the yen rallied sharply, rising about Y5 within hours to the Y155 level. The dollar stood at around Y156.75 on Sunday morning Tokyo time. Vice Finance Minister for International Affairs Atsushi Mimura told reporters that what has happened in the FX markets during the Golden Week holidays is “just a beginning.”
Katayama and her deputy Mimura earlier on Thursday warned against the yen’s slide as the currency weakened to Y160.72 in Tokyo trading, its weakest level since July 2024. The Middle East conflict is choking off oil and gas shipments from the Gulf states through the Strait of Hormuz, particularly hurting Japan that relies heavily on crude oil from the Gulf.
If Tokyo did conduct currency intervention, it would be the first time since July 2024, when it spent a total of Y5.53 trillion ($35 billion) to support the currency after it had weakened to an around 38-year low against the dollar close to Y162.
The yen remains depressed as the U.S. Federal Reserve has been cautious about cutting interest rates in the face of growing upside risks to inflation sparked by the Iran war while policy normalization by the Bank of Japan from zero to slightly negative levels have been at a snail’s pace, keeping the returns on holding dollar denominated assets attractive.
The notion of a weak yen still supports exporter share prices in Japanese stock markets but it hurts most of the stocks listed in Tokyo as the depreciation of the yen has boosted import costs for both households and businesses in the past few years.
Trade data has shown that a cheaper yen does not necessarily lead to higher export volumes because many firms have shifted their production closer to consumers.
Investors tend to believe that the Bank of Japan policy board would consider hiking rates to slow the yen’s depreciation but Japanese officials have warned that it’s not that simple. The dollar/yen exchange rate has been affected by other factors: real demand for the U.S. unit, geopolitical risks, a shift in the status of safe-haven currencies and speculative trading in cross pairs like euro/yen.
At its April 27-28 meeting, the BOJ’s nine-member board decided in a 6 to 3 vote to leave the target for the overnight interest at 0.75% after leaving it unchanged in an 8 to 1 vote at its previous meetings in March and January and conducting its first rate hike in six meetings in December by raising it by 25 basis points (0.25 percentage point) to a 30-year high in a unanimous vote.
The bank pointed to upside risks to inflation, given that underlying CPI inflation is approaching the bank’s 2% target and firms’ behavior is shifting more toward raising wages and prices.
Bank of Japan Governor Ueda told a post-meeting news conference on why the board stood pat: “To put it simply, the fundamental reason is that the certainty of our core outlook has diminished. Behind this, we must remain vigilant regarding the risk of inflation exceeding expectations and the risk of an economic downturn.”
Asked how long the bank would continue assessing risks before taking action, the governor replied, “We don’t prejudge (before going into the meeting). We will continue reviewing the probability of our outlook and the nature of risks at the next meetings onwards and make appropriate decisions.”
Ueda pointed to the common challenge for major central banks: Both downside risks to growth and upside risks to inflation are getting bigger, making it harder for policymakers to judge how they will evolve. He also said he needs a little more time to have a clearer picture of how the Mideast conflict will affect Japan’s wobbly recovery.
Board member Hajime Takata, formerly with Mizuho Securities, called for a rate increase to 1.0% for the third meeting in a row, arguing that the bank’s 2% inflation target has been “largely achieved” and that Japan’s inflation risks are “skewed to the upside due to second-round effects of price rises stemming from overseas developments.” Naoki Tamura, who came from the Sumitomo Mitsui banking group, rejoined Takata in calling for a 25 basis point hike, saying the bank should set the policy rate “as close to the neutral rate as possible” as inflation risks are “significantly skewed to the upside.”
Junko Nakagawa, a former Nomura Securities executive, joined the chorus for a 25 bp hike, noting that upside risks to inflation are high under the current accommodative financial conditions.
The board repeated that it will continue raising rates if growth and inflation evolve in line with its medium-term outlook, noting that real interest rates are at “significantly low levels.” The BOJ has been lifting the policy rate only gradually toward a more neutral level of at least 1%, noting that many firms are likely to continue raising wages into fiscal 2026 that began on April 1.
In its quarterly Outlook Report issued after the April 27-28 meeting, the bank brought forward the timing of hitting the 2% inflation target, saying “between the second half of fiscal 2026 and fiscal 2027,” underlying CPI inflation and the rate of increase in the core CPI (excluding fresh food) should increase gradually and will be “at a level that is generally consistent with the price stability target.” For years, the bank continued to peg the timing to “the second half of its projection period” (in this case, from fiscal 2026 through fiscal 2028).
On the data front, the effective blockade of the Strait of Hormuz by Washington and Tehran choked off factory output in Japan, squeezing the availability of naphtha cracked from light (low sulfur) crude, the source for ethylene, propylene and benzene among others. These petrochemicals are essential for producing plastics and resins that are used in most consumer and industrial goods ranging from vehicles and appliances to paint and food packages.
Industrial production shrank 0.5% on in March, closer to the low end of economist forecasts, posting its second straight drop after dipping 2.0% in February and rising 4.3% in January.
Looking ahead, the abrupt departure of the United Arab Emirates from the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, the 66-year-old cartel led by Saudi Arabia, is unlikely to be a major issue for Japan, which has long established close ties with both Abu Dhabi and Riyadh.
In the past, the Saudis worked as a swing producer in the interests of the United States, a close military ally, and thus beneficial for Israel, which is often seen as influencing U.S. policymaking. The Saudis’ clout over global crude oil output and pricing has waned over time in light of higher production by non-OPEC members including shale gas producers in North America.
The UAE is bypassing the Strait of Hormuz, the crucial for oil and gas exports from the Mideast Gulf states to the world, particularly Asia, and shipping its Murban (high sulfur) crude out of its Fujairah port, but has been forced to cut its output by half in the wake of the Mideast conflict the broke out more than two months ago.
Japan relies 43.3% of its crude imports on the UAE, the largest supplier for the country, followed by Saudi Arabia (39.4%) and Kuwait (6.2%), a known OPEC quota cheater before Iraq invaded it in 1990. The long-standing UAE-Saudi feud is unlikely to strain Tokyo’s tides with either of them as refineries buy oil and gas mostly under term deals.
The monthly survey by the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry indicated that output would remain depressed, down 0.7% on the month in April, as the Iran war impact lingers despite plans to raise output of computer chips and vehicles as the auto industry has survived Trump tariff storms. At this point, the METI’s forecast index points to a 2.2% increase, led by the auto industry, but that is before adjusting the data’s upward bias (just like the pre-adjusted +2.1% projected for April).
The ministry maintained its assessment that industrial output was “taking one step forward and one step back.” The last change was made in the July 2024 report, when it upgraded its view.
Another indicator for projecting GDP pointed to sluggish but resilient consumer spending.
Japanese retail sales posted a modest 1.7% rise on year in March, propped up by demand for spring clothing at department stores, a pickup in auto demand and usual suspects of drugs/cosmetics, after slipping 0.4% in February in payback for a high level of auto sales in February 2025 and a 10th straight drop in fuel sales. Government subsidies continued depressing fuel prices in March.
The Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry maintained its assessment after upgrading it in the January report, saying retail sales are “on a gradual uptrend.” It noted the three-month moving average rose an impressive 0.8% on a seasonally adjusted basis after being flat in February and 0.9% at the start of the year.
The 1.7% q/q gain for the January-March quarter points to resilient consumption in the Q1 GDP data (due May 19) but that’s just depicts the picture from the supply side. Economists, however, don’t wait for the demand side data, namely household spending because of its small data samples and rolling changes of the samples that is make it harder to trace spending patters by the same consumers. The forecasts also reply on industrial production for March and Q1 to check the pulse of domestic demand from the corporate viewpoints.
Industry data showed department store sales posted their third straight year-on-year increase in March, up 3.2%, after rising 1.6% in February, led by solid demand for spring clothing and high-end watches and jewelries. Sales to visitors from overseas marked their first gain in five months as the weak yen boosted their purchasing power. Chinese tourists continued boycotting Japan over bilateral diplomatic rows while spending by visitors from Taiwan, South Korea, Southeast Asia and the United States more than offset the impact of a 20% drop in sales to visitors from China.
Monday, May 4
Japanese markets are closed for the Greenery Day public holiday.
Thursday, May 5
Japanese markets are closed for the Children’s Day public holiday.
Wednesday, May 6
Japanese markets are closed for the Constitutional Memorial Day observed.
Thursday, May 7
Trading resumes after the Golden Week holidays but some market participants are not returning to work until Monday, May 11.
Friday, May 8
0830 JST (2330 GMT/1930 EDT Thursday, May 7) Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare releases preliminary March average wages.
–Powell: To Stay on Fed Board After Warsh Becomes Chair
–Four FOMC Participants Dissented, Three of Them Against Inclusion of Easing Bias
– Powell: Monetary Policy ‘In Good Place’ To ‘Wait and See’
– Powell: Before Tightening Bias, FOMC Would First Move To ‘Neutral’ Forward Guidance
By Steven K. Beckner
(MaceNews) – The Federal Reserve’s policymaking Federal Open Market Committee left the short-term interest rates it controls unchanged Wednesday, and for the time being it made no change in its “forward guidance” on the future path of rates.
Even though the war against Iran has been pushing up oil and in turn gasoline and other prices, the FOMC continued to signal that its next rate move will most likely be to resume cutting rates at some point, contrary to the expectations of some observers that the Committee might drop the easing bias it has maintained since early December.
However, the FOMC’s policy statement revealed, uncharacteristically, that there was considerable sentiment for removing the easing bias, and Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said “the center is moving” in the direction of symmetrical forward guidance that would open the door to a potential rate hike.
For now, faced with extraordinary uncertainties and risks on both sides of its dual mandate, Powell said he and his FOMC colleagues believe monetary policy is “in a good place” to “wait and see” how economic developments emerge and how the balance of risks to its “price stability” and “maximum employment” mandates evolve.
So they left the federal funds rate in a target range of 3.50-3.75% for a third straight meeting, after cutting that key money market rate by 75 basis points in the final three meetings of 2025 and 175 basis points since September 2024.
Only Governor Stephen Miran dissented, once more, in favor of an immediate 25 basis point rate cut, but three other FOMC members who supported leaving the funds rate unchanged did not support the retention of an easing bias in the policy statement.
Powell, speaking to reporters after what was almost certainly his last two-day monetary policy meeting as chairman, said he and a majority of the 12 FOMC voters felt “no rush” to change policy signals, but suggested that could happen at the next meeting in June.
If inflation risks were to intensify, the FOMC might have to move to a tightening bias,” but before doing that, it would first adopt a “neutral” (or symmetical) statement, said Powell, who vowed to stay on as a regular Fed governor after his term as chairman expires on May 15.
Fed policymakers met in difficult circumstances. Even as they waited hopefully for the impact of President Trump’s tariff hikes to fade, his attack on Iran to eliminate its nuclear ambitions presented another wave of adverse economic consequences. The war-related spike in the cost of oil is simultaneously putting upward pressure on prices and threatening to hurt growth and employment – “stagflation” as some have termed it.
The war, with its twists and turns, surprises and disappointments, has added another layer of complexity to Fed decision-making, as the FOMC statement acknowledged.
As at its March 17-18 meeting, the FOMC left the federal funds rate in a target range of 3.50-3.75%, after cutting that key money market rate by 75 basis points in the final three meetings of 2025 and 175 basis points since September 2024.
In their revised Summary of Economic Projections, the 19 FOMC participants projected a single 25 basis point rate cut by the end of 2026, which would take the funds rate down to a target range of 3.25% to 3.50% (a median 3.4%). But Fed watchers have become increasingly dubious whether the FOMC will be able to cut the funds rate at all, and some speculate that the Fed’s next move could be a rate hike.
The FOMC will not compile another SEP until its June 16-17 meeting.
In its policy statement, the FOMC made little change to its characterization of economic conditions, again calling economic activity “solid,” job gains “low,” unemployment “little changed” and inflation “elevated.” But the statement put heightened emphasis on the impact of the war,
“Developments in the Middle East are contributing to a high level of uncertainty about the economic outlook,” the FOMC declared before repeating that it is “attentive to the risks to both sides of its dual mandate.”
There was evidently an intense debate over the phrasing of the “forward guidance” paragraph of the policy statement, with a sizable minority arguing in favor of removing the easing bias that had been in place since the FOMC’s last rate cut.
Starting on Dec. 10, 2025, when it made its third straight rate cut and began an indefinite pause, and continuing in its Jan. 28 and March 18 statements, the FOMC said, “In considering the extent and timing of additional adjustments to the target range for the federal funds rate,”
That language has been widely interpreted as assymmetrical, implying that the FOMC would go back to cutting rates at some point. In recent months, there has been mounting talk among Fed officials that the FOMC’s next move might need to be a rate hike if oil-related inflation pressures persisted, leading to speculation that the FOMC might remove this implicit easing bias.
And indeed, in a rare disclosure, the rate announcement reveals that there was strong sentiment for doing just that: “Beth M. Hammack, Neel Kashkari, and Lorie K. Logan …. supported maintaining the target range for the federal funds rate but did not support inclusion of an easing bias in the statement at this time.”
Although the reiterated wording does not rule out an eventual rate hike, it strongly suggests a resumption of rate cuts is more likely, but it leaves in doubt how long the pause in rate cuts will last.
Asked about the unusually public revelation of policy disagreement, Powell acknowledged that “We had quite a vigorous discussion about that issue and the guidance and is it still appropriate and that kind of thing.”
“I would say the number of people on the Committee who either could support that language change, changing to a more neutral stance so that a hike is likely as a cut, that number has increased over the intermeeting period,” he continued.
“It’s easy to see why,” Powell added, noting that inflation has been moving “in the wrong direction. And we know that … there’s headline inflation coming out of the (Persian) Gulf and we don’t know how much that will be. We just, we’re going to need to see.”
“So it makes all the sense in the world people would look at that and we’d have a vigorous discussion about that,” he went on.
Although all but Miran agreed on leaving the funds rate unchanged at this meeting, three wanted to remove the easing bias, but Powell said “the majority of the Committee did not want to do that,” and he said he was among those who “didn’t think we needed to do it this meeting.”
“It really was just a question of why do we need to do that now,” he elaborated. “We have so much to learn. There’s so much uncertainly about the path ahead. There doesn’t need to be any rush to make that decision now, because … what happens in the next thirty, sixty days, even by the next meeting could really change the picture around that language.”
Powell said the debate over whether to remove the easing bias was “a much closer thing” than at the March FOMC meeting, and he added, “it’s gotten to be a better question in the interim period …. . A majority are still on the page of not feeling the need to move to that level, and that’s where I am.”
But he said he “get(s) it, though. You know, at a certain point you would move. And that conceivably could come as soon as the next meeting.”
Responding to another question about the internal Fed argument over abandoning the easing bias, Powell said, “the center is moving toward a more neutral place.”
But he suggested the FOMC should proceed cautiously about changing its forward guidance. “I just think, you know, there’s a lot of signaling going on when you change guidance like that. And so we just — I guess the majority, a majority of us didn’t feel like we needed to send a signal on that right now.”
“But maybe it will come to that,” Powell continued. “And the reason is because, you know, we’re kind of waiting to see what happens with events in the Middle East and what are the implications of those events for the U.S. economy. So there is a group who feels like we don’t need to be in a hurry to do tha.”
The outgoing Fed chief suggested the FOMC should move incrementally. “Of course we will move to a hike in bias if we want a hike. And we’ll move to a neutral bias before that.”
Although there was dissensions about the policy bias, Powell suggested there is little disagreement (outside of Miran) on the appropriateness of the current policy stance.
“Fortunately, we’re in a good place to wait and let things develop,” he said,
“We really think our policy rate is in a good place,” he said at another point. “If we need to hike, we will certainly signal that and we will certainly do it. If we need to cut then if it’s appropriate to cut we’ll signal the opposite.”
“I think because we feel like we’re in a good place to move in either direction, nobody’s calling for a hike right now,” he continued. “So it really is going to depend on how things evolve.”
At another point, Powell said, “We’re going to have to wait and see … . The good news is we think our policy stance is in a very good place for us to wait and see.”
In the current target range, the funds rate is “at the high end of neutral or perhaps mildly restrictive.”
“The labor market shows more and more signs of stability, whereas inflation is kind of misbehaving,” Powell continued, “So maybe a little bit of restriction or the high end of neutral is the right place to be. So we can wait here and see how things work out before we act.”
Powell gave no indication that monetary policy needs to be eased anytime soon. “I think pretty close to the neutral rate, …. at the higher end of the range what I would consider reasonable neutral rate.”
With the labor market “cooling off just a little bit,” he said, “I don’t think there’s much of a case for, any case really for policy looking fully restrictive. Maybe mildly or neutral I would say.”
Powell was careful to observe that the oil price spike can impact both sides of the Fed’s dual mandate. “Remember when gas prices go up, that’s disposable income coming out of people’s pockets so they’re going to spend less on other things. So there will be a hit to GDP. So it’s a question whether spending … goes down to offset the inflationary effects. So …. the answer isn’t obvious ex-ante whether you should move the rate because of that. We’ll have to see how it evolves.”
Leading up to their meeting, FOMC participants got a look at a mixture of data which showed “unusual crosscurrents in the economy, as New York Fed President and FOMC Vice Chairman John Williams has put it.
On the inflation side of the Fed’s dual mandate, the Consumer Price Index (CPI) jumped 0.9% in March or 3.3% from a year earlier. The core CPI was better behaved, rising 0.2% for the month and 2.7% year-over-year.
The Fed’s “beige book” survey of economic conditions in the 12 Fed districts found that “price growth mostly remained moderate overall, with the vast majority of Districts reporting moderate increases and others pointing to modest growth. Generally, input cost increases outpaced selling price growth, compressing margins.”
On the employment side, the Fed has so far not seen any alarming developments. Although GDP growth has slowed, and although employers are not hiring at the rate they were a year ago, most labor market measures have so far remained within acceptable bounds. In March, non-farm payrolls grew a surprising 178,000, and the unemployment rate dipped a tenth to 4.3%.
The beige book reported that “on balance, employment was steady to up slightly during this reporting period, though one District noted a slight decline.” The Atlanta Fed has lowered its GDPNow first quarter growth forecast to 1.2%, from as high as 3.1%.
Such data have prompted Fed officials such as San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank Mary Daly to say recently that the economy is “in a good place,” reinforcing the belief that the economy is not in urgent need of additional stimulus. Powell repeatedly echoed that sentiment Wednesday.
This was the last FOMC meeting to be chaired by Powell, as he told reporters, but not his last a voting member.
Last Friday, the Justice Department dropped its criminal probe into Powell, prompting hold-out Republican Senator Thom Tillis, R-NC., to drop his opposition to President’s Trump nomination of Kevin Warsh to succeed him. As the FOMC began its second day of discussions Wednesday morning, the Senate Banking Committee approved the Warsh nomination on a party-line vote, clearing the way for the full Senate to confirm him, presumably in time to take over when Powell’s term as chairman expires on May 15 and to chair the FOMC’s next scheduled meeting June 16-17.
However, Powell is not going away quite yet. After flirting with the idea previously, he announced Wednesday, “After my term as chair ends on May 15th I will continue to serves as a governor for a period of time to be determined.”
He vowed to “keep a low profile as a governor.”
Asked whether he might continue to exercise influence as a “shadow chairman,” Powell replied, “That’s something I would never do …. . I don’t know what the exact specifics of it will be, but I’m going back to being a governor. I respect the role of Chair.”
Having served as a governor under Chairmen Ben Bernanke and Janet Yellen, he said, “I had real sympathy for how hard it is to get that group to consensus. And I always felt like, you know, I don’t want to add to that unnecessarily …. . I propose to be a very constructive participant in that process really out of respect for the office of the Chair.“
Powell did not say how long he will stay as governor, but said he “will not leave the Board until this investigation is well and truly over with transparency and finality.”
By Max Sato (MaceNews) – Japan’s government continues to expect a gradual economic recovery, backed by strong demand for investment in artificial intelligence, while Tokyo
WASHINGTON (MaceNews) – The following are the remarks of Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh prepared for delivery Tuesday to the Senate Banking Committee confirmation hearing:
–Exports Likely Remain Resilient in March Trade Data, Inflation Seen Tame Below BOJ’s 2% Target but High Price Levels Still Hurt By Max Sato (MaceNews)
0850 JST (2350 GMT/1950 EDT Tuesday, April 21) The Ministry of Finance releases March trade.Mace News median: exports +11.2% y/y (range: +8.9% to +14.2%) vs.
0830 JST (2330 GMT/1930 EDT Thursday, April 23) The Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications releases March CPI. Mace News median: total CPI +1.4% y/y
– Waller Forecasts Possible Rate Cuts but Not until ‘Later This Year’ – Daly ‘Wouldn’t Be Surprised’ If Funds Rate Left Unchanged Through 2026 By
–February Machinery Orders Seen Flat on Month After Smaller-Than-Expected Drop in January; BOJ Tankan Showed Solid Capex Plans in Fiscal 2026 By Max Sato (MaceNews)
–Geopolitical Conflict Still Top Tail Risk By Vicki Schmelzer NEW YORK (MaceNews) – Global fund managers pared risk holdings in April, with the move driven
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