Looks like the Fed is on hold at least through June
The
It looks like the
As expected, the Fed raised the federal funds rate 25 basis points Wednesday to a range of 5%-5.25%, a 16-year high.
DON'T MISS: Fed Opens Door to Rate Pause After 10th Straight Hike
But the central bank also changed the wording of its policy statement Wednesday to indicate a likely pause in its rate-hike campaign.
Now the statement reads, "In determining the extent to which additional policy firming may be appropriate to return inflation to 2% over time, …"
The previous statement (from March) gave a stronger nod toward increasing rates.
It read, "
Significant Wording Change
Fed Chairman
"That's a meaningful change that we're no longer saying that we 'anticipate'" more rate rises, Powell said. "So we'll be driven by incoming data, meeting by meeting, and we'll approach that question at the June meeting."
While inflation is falling, employment data is mixed. The economy added 236,000 jobs in March, with unemployment at a measly 3.5%. But job openings slipped for a third straight month in March, to 9.59 million from 10 million in February.
Rate-Cut Pivot?
With the economy slowing -- GDP growth totaled only 1.1% annualized in the first quarter -- many investors anticipate the Fed will pivot to rate cuts in coming months.
The positions of interest-rate traders indicate a 60% probability that the Fed will send the fed funds rate back down to at least 4.25%-4.5% by year-end.
"After today's meeting, investors have likely seen the peak fed funds rate," said
Looking forward, "as inflation further decelerates and the job market cools, investors should anticipate some rate cuts in the latter half of the year," Roach said.
Houston Law Firm to Award Autism Scholarship for Higher Education
Which U.S. bank will collapse next?
Advisor News
Annuity News
Health/Employee Benefits News
Life Insurance News