Fed Stays on Track for Rate Cuts With One Eye on Bumpy Inflation

Federal Reserve policymakers are largely sticking to their path of interest-rate cuts — for now — after hitting a bump on the road to low and steady inflation.

The recent pickup in monthly inflation didn’t sway Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s message Wednesday that price pressures will continue to ease or that it will likely be appropriate to lower rates at some point this year. And a narrow majority of US central bank officials signaled they still expect to cut rates three times in 2024.

Speaking after the Fed’s two-day policy meeting in Washington, Powell also said it would be appropriate to slow the pace at which the Fed reduces its bond holdings “fairly soon.”

But nearly half of Fed officials would prefer two or fewer rate reductions in 2024, according to their updated economic projections, and it’s clear policymakers need more data confirming a downward inflation trend before lowering borrowing costs. They see higher underlying inflation, substantially stronger economic growth and lower unemployment in 2024 than forecast in December.

“Powell’s basic message is that the underlying story hasn’t changed,” said Bill Dudley, a former New York Fed president and Bloomberg Opinion columnist. “‘We didn’t completely buy into how good the inflation numbers were in the second half of last year. We aren’t completely put off by the bad inflation readings in January and February.’”

Following a series of better-than-expected inflation readings in the second half of 2023, Fed officials had begun discussing the timing and pace of interest-rate reductions. But an acceleration in key price gauges at the start of the year has muddled the picture.

Powell largely shrugged off the higher inflation reports, and traders boosted the probability that the Fed would begin rate cuts in June. The S&P 500 index of US stocks closed at all-time highs.

Fed March Dot Plot