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Fed open to September rate cut

Fed open to September rate cut

WASHINGTON – The US Federal Reserve may signal this week that interest rate cuts are on the way – although it is widely expected to remain on pause until its next rate decision in September. 

Fed officials, who have admitted moving too slowly to stem an inflationary surge in 2021 and 2022, have been wary of cutting rates too soon and accidentally reigniting inflation.

“The Fed as a group does not want to be seen as having allowed inflation to reaccelerate, or inflation to remain persistent at above their target,” EY chief economist Gregory Daco told AFP. “There is definitely a bias from having been burned on the upside.”

Most analysts and traders do not expect the Fed to start cutting rates in July, even with recent data indicating that inflation continues to slow toward the US central bank’s long-term target of two percent, while economic growth remains strong and the labour market is coming into better balance.

“Clearly, the ongoing disinflation process is occurring,” Citi global chief economist Nathan Sheets told AFP. “And that is very encouraging for the Fed.”

But the US central bank “still has time to start its cutting cycle,” he added.

The Fed has held its key lending rate at the current range between 5.25% and 5.50% for the past year as it has sought to dampen demand in the world’s biggest economy and bring inflation back down to target.

Higher interest rates make borrowing more expensive for consumers and businesses, indirectly pushing up the cost of everything from car loans to home mortgages.

With the data now moving firmly in the right direction, Fed chair Jerome Powell can use the July meeting to lay the groundwork for a September rate cut, and reinforce his message during a keynote speech to a gathering of the world’s central bankers in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, next month, according to Sheets from Citi. – Nampa/AFP