What You Need to Know
- The target for the benchmark rate was raised by a quarter percentage point to a range of 4.5% to 4.75%.
- The unanimous decision by the Federal Open Market Committee was in line with financial market expectations.
- Investors wanted to know if Powell would push back against market expectations that the Fed will cut rates later in the year as inflation eases and economic growth slows. He did.
The Federal Reserve slowed its drive to rein in inflation and said further interest-rate hikes are in store as officials debate when to end their most aggressive tightening of credit in four decades.
Chair Jerome Powell and fellow policymakers lifted the Fed’s target for its benchmark rate by a quarter percentage point to a range of 4.5% to 4.75%. The smaller move followed a half-point increase in December and four jumbo-sized 75 basis-point hikes prior to that.
“We think we’ve covered a lot of ground,” Powell told reporters after the meeting. “Even so, we have more work to do.”
Investors took heart from Powell’s remarks acknowledging that price pressures have started to ease, even though he reiterated the Fed’s outlook for more rate hikes. The S&P 500 climbed after briefly falling to session lows as he spoke and two-year yields fell.
“The committee anticipates that ongoing increases in the target range will be appropriate in order to attain a stance of monetary policy that is sufficiently restrictive to return inflation to 2% over time,” the Fed said in a statement issued after the two-day policymaking meeting, repeating language it has used in previous communications.
The unanimous decision by the Federal Open Market Committee was in line with financial market expectations.
In a sign that the end of the hiking cycle may be in sight, the committee said the “extent of future increases” in rates will depend on a number of factors including cumulative tightening of monetary policy. It had previously tied the “pace” of future increases to those factors.
In another shift from its last statement, the Fed noted that inflation “has eased somewhat but remains elevated,” suggesting policymakers are growing more confident that price pressures have peaked.
That compares with prior language where officials simply stated price growth was “elevated.”
Investors wanted to know if Powell would push back against market expectations that the Fed will cut rates later in the year as inflation eases and economic growth slows. He did.
“Restoring price stability will likely require maintaining a restrictive stance for some time,” he told reporters. While recent readings on price pressures were encouraging, he added that “it would be very premature to declare victory.”
At their prior meeting in December, 17 of 19 policymakers forecast that they’ll increase rates to 5% or above this year, with none looking for cuts.
There were no fresh forecasts published on Wednesday but Powell did reference those projections as a guide about how much higher officials expect to raise rates.
Some Fed officials sounded more hopeful last month that they can achieve a soft landing of the world’s largest economy, bringing down inflation without crashing the US into a recession. White House officials and the International Monetary Fund are also voicing more optimism.
Most private economists though don’t think the Fed will get by without pushing the US into a downturn. Forecasters surveyed by Bloomberg in January put the probability of a contraction over the next year at 65%.