Federal Reserve to maintain interest rates, yet indicate policy direction in upcoming meeting

Federal Reserve to maintain interest rates, yet indicate policy direction in upcoming meeting

WASHINGTON, Sept 19 (Reuters) ‍- The ​U.S. Federal Reserve kicks off a two-day policy meeting on Tuesday ⁤with officials widely expected to keep interest rates on hold for now, ⁤but also flagging in new economic projections whether they feel rates still need to rise further ⁣before the end of the year.A new policy statement and‌ interest rate decision ‌will be released at​ 2 p.m. EDT (1800 GMT) on Wednesday,​ with Fed Chair Jerome Powell scheduled to hold a press conference at 2:30 p.m. to elaborate.Investors in contracts tied to ⁣the federal ‍funds rate consider it a near certainty the U.S. central bank will leave the benchmark federal funds rate at the current range of between 5.25% and 5.5%,​ a step consistent​ with the Fed’s shift to a slower and ⁤more considered pace of rate increases.From March 2022 through May 2023 ⁣the Fed raised rates at 10 successive meetings – by anywhere from a quarter to three ⁤quarters of a point – as it fought the worst rise of inflation since the early​ 1980s.Reuters Graphics Reuters GraphicsIn June‌ the Fed paused, but⁤ the quarterly⁤ economic projections accompanying that decision showed 12 of ‍18 policymakers still anticipated two more quarter-point rate increases by the‍ end of the​ year.One of those came at the July ⁢meeting. While the Fed’s slower, “data dependent” pacing‌ may ‍lead officials to skip over September, analysts say there ⁢has ⁤been little in recent⁢ economic ‍news that would prompt⁢ policymakers to take ⁢that last ⁤rate increase off the table.The‌ logic “is partly inertia, as Committee participants might not want to mess with what’s ⁣working,” said JP Morgan economist Michael Feroli.Additionally, data ​since the Fed’s‍ last meeting, while generally supporting the⁣ view ⁤of slowing inflation alongside continued economic⁣ growth, has been somewhat mixed as the pace of headline price ​increases recently ​jumped.As of the ​July meeting “it was still the case…that ‘most ⁣participants continued to see significant upside risks to ⁣inflation,'” Feroli said, quoting from the minutes of that meeting. While⁣ inflation has slowed from its peak‌ last year, underlying measures‌ show prices still rising at about double the Fed’s 2% target.Reuters Graphics Reuters Graphics’RISKS ARE SKEWED’Policymakers, and notably Powell, have also been reluctant to show any give in their inflation fight, even if it ⁤means higher interest rates than expected and greater risk to ​an economy that has produced more jobs⁢ and growth than anticipated given the rapid tightening ‍of monetary⁤ policy.A higher Fed rate leads banks and financial firms ⁢to raise their⁢ own rates as well for ⁤things ⁢like home mortgages, business loans, credit cards and a variety of other types of financing – discouraging investment and household​ spending⁤ and, ⁣through ​that drop in demand, lowering inflation.Closing the ‌door on further rate increases now could lead overall financial conditions to loosen as markets price⁣ for a lower rate trajectory,‌ the opposite of what the Fed​ would want while it remains…

Original from www.reuters.com

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