Fed lowers rates but sees fewer cuts next year due to stubbornly high inflation
Powell's explicit - and repeated - references to the need for caution from here on jolted
"I think we're in a good place, but I think from here it's a new phase and we're going to be cautious about further cuts," Powell said at a press conference after the central bank's policy-setting
Powell described at length the ways in which inflation has improved since peaking in 2022, as well as the ways it has disappointed by moving "sideways" in recent months, with shelter costs in particular improving more slowly than the Fed expected.
While he said the Fed remained confident price pressures would continue to ease, he also acknowledged central bank staff and policymakers were beginning to at least preliminarily think through how President-elect
In developing new projections, "some people did take a very preliminary step and start to incorporate highly conditional estimates of economic effects of policies into their forecasts at this meeting," Powell said of an outlook in which
An index of policymakers' sense of risk around their projections also shifted sharply higher for inflation, with a separate measure of uncertainty increasing as well in an abrupt change from the outlook issued in September, before the
Powell said those changes were largely driven by data, but analysts saw the beginnings of a reckoning with Trump policies that many expect will add to inflation pressures.
The new projections show officials expect the personal consumption expenditures price index excluding food and energy costs, or core PCE, to be stuck at 2.5% through 2025, an improvement over this year's 2.8% but significantly higher than the Fed's 2% target.
"Uncertainty and upside risks to core PCE inflation both up sharply since September. This seems to largely reflect new government policies' potential impact," said
ONE DISSENT
Going into this week's meeting the central bank had been widely expected to deliver a "hawkish" rate cut by estimating roughly half the policy easing in 2025 than the 100 basis points policymakers had projected three months ago. But by the time Powell had finished speaking, only one 25-basis-point cut for next year was reflected in market pricing.
The changed outlook highlights some of the challenges Trump may face delivering on key campaign promises, with tighter Fed policy likely keeping important consumer interest rates like those on home mortgages elevated, and less improvement on inflation undermining his pledge to lower prices.
Powell even said the decision to lower the policy rate to the 4.25%-4.50% range this time was a "closer call" than implied by financial markets that considered the cut a near certainty ahead of the meeting.
The decision drew a dissent from Cleveland Fed President
But Powell was also clear that the baseline outlook was for the economy to continue to perform well with ongoing growth, low unemployment and inflation that officials expect to drift slowly lower.
Rates will fall again once inflation shows it is making more progress, "with the extent and timing of additional adjustments to the target range" depending on "incoming data, the evolving outlook, and the balance of risks," the Fed said in new language that sets up a likely pause to the rate cuts beginning at the
That is half a percentage point less in policy easing next year than officials anticipated as of September, with Fed projections of inflation for the first year of the new Trump administration jumping from 2.1% in their prior projections to 2.5% in the current ones.
Slower progress on inflation, which is not seen returning to the 2% target until 2027, translates into a slower pace of rate cuts and a slightly higher ending point for rates at 3.1%, also to be hit in 2027, versus the prior "terminal" rate of 2.9% seen as of September.
Fed lowers rates again, points to inflation ahead
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