Fed’s Powell puts September rate cut on table as US inflation cools
Powell pushed the message even further forward in his post-meeting press conference, noting that price pressures were now easing broadly in the economy - what he called "quality" disinflation - and that if coming data evolves as anticipated, support for cutting rates will grow.
"If we were to see inflation moving down … more or less in line with expectations, growth remains reasonably strong, and the labor market remains consistent with current conditions, then I think a rate cut could be on the table at the September meeting," he said.
Republican lawmakers warned in a hearing with Powell in July that a rate cut at the
"This is how we think about it. This is what we do," Powell said.
Some Fed policymakers even discussed the logic of cutting rates at this session, Powell said, but "the sense of the (policy-setting) committee was not at this meeting, but as soon as the next meeting depending on how the data come in."• • •
SETTING THE STAGE
Powell's remarks on Wednesday affirmed what investors had come to see as a near certainty that the Fed would pivot in September from an era of restrictive, some would say punishing, interest rates, to a steady easing of credit policy that would see inflation finish the journey to the 2% level without undue damage to the labor market.
Powell said he felt such a "soft landing" was in view, with data that is "not signaling a weak economy. It is also not signaling an overheating economy," he noted.
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