Sunday, December 22, 2024

Fed hails ‘considerable progress’ on inflation

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The US has made “considerable progress” toward the Fed’s 2pc inflation goal, the chairman of the Federal Reserve told the US Congress this afternoon. 

Jerome Powell said that America is “no longer an overheated economy” with a job market that has “cooled considerably” from its pandemic-era extremes and in many ways is back where it was before the health crisis.

“We are well aware that we now face two-sided risks,” and can no longer focus solely on inflation, Mr Powell told the Senate Banking Committee on Tuesday. “The labour market appears to be fully back in balance.”

Mr Powell told lawmakers bluntly that “today I’m not going to be sending any signals about the timing of any future actions” on interest rates, as he was quizzed by Democrats about the risks to the job market and by Republicans about the pain to households of inflation that remains above the central bank’s 2pc target.

But analysts still saw Mr Powell at least edging the door open to a rate cut as soon as September.

“His emphasis has shifted a bit towards a balance of risks within the Fed’s mandate,” said Christopher Hodge, chief economist for the US at Natixis in New York. “The Fed needs to get ahead of weakness in the labour market … It appears as if the foundation is being laid for a pivot in September.”

Mr Powell told Senators that inflation had been improving in recent months and that “more good data would strengthen” the case for looser monetary policy.

The Fed has kept its policy rate in the 5.25pc to 5.5pc range since July 2023.

Mr Powell’s comments appeared to show increasing faith that inflation will return to the Fed’s target, and contrasted the lack of progress on inflation in the first months of the year to recent improvement that has helped build the Fed’s confidence that price pressures will continue to diminish.

He said: “After a lack of progress toward our 2pc inflation objective in the early part of this year, the most recent monthly readings have shown modest further progress. More good data would strengthen our confidence that inflation is moving sustainably toward 2pc.”

The Fed receives consumer price information for the month of June on Thursday.

A jobs report on Friday showed a still-solid 206,000 jobs added in June, but with a slowing monthly trend and a rising unemployment rate now at 4.1pc.

Mr Powell called that a “still low level”, but also noted that “in light of the progress made both in lowering inflation and in cooling the labor market over the past two years, elevated inflation is not the only risk we face.”

Leaving policy too tight for too long “could unduly weaken economic activity and employment,” Mr Powell said, undermining a period of economic growth that he said “remains solid” with “robust” private demand, improved overall supply conditions, and a “a pickup in residential investment”.

Following Mr Powell’s comments, investors continued to give a roughly 70pc probability the Fed will cut rates at its September meeting, a view that would likely require changes to the policy statement to be released after the Fed’s July 30-31 meeting.

“He’s beginning to tee up a rate cut,” said Brian Jacobsen, chief economist with Annex Wealth Management. “They view risks in not cutting soon enough.”

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