Fed likely to hold rates, signal market-moving outlook

By MG News | June 18, 2025 at 05:11 PM GMT+05:00
June 18, 2025 (MLN): Federal Reserve officials get to voice their outlook this
week on the future path of interest rates, along with the impact that tariffs
and Middle East turmoil will have on the economy.
Among the biggest things to watch will be whether Federal Open Market Committee members stick with their previous forecast of two rate cuts this year.
While any immediate movement on interest rates seems improbable, the policy meeting, which concludes Wednesday, will feature important signals that still could move markets.
Also in focus will be how they see inflation trending and any reaction from Chair Jerome Powell to what has become a concerted White House campaign for easier monetary policy, as per CNBC.
“The Fed’s main message at the June meeting will be that it
remains comfortably in wait-and-see mode,” Bank of America economist Aditya
Bhave said in a note.
BofA said it expects the Fed won’t cut at all this year but
will leave open the possibility for one reduction.
“Investors should focus on Powell’s take on the softening
labor data, the recent benign inflation prints and the risks of persistent
tariff-driven inflation”, BofA added.
The committee’s “dot plot” grid of individual members’ rate
expectations will be front and center for investors.
At the last update in March, the committee indicated the
equivalent of two quarter-percentage-point reductions this year, which is in
line with current market pricing.
However, that was a close call, and just two participants
changing their approach would swing the median forecast down to one cut.
The meeting comes against a complicated geopolitical
backdrop in which the impact of President Donald Trump’s tariffs on inflation
has been minimal so far, but is unclear for the future.
At the same time, Trump and other administration
officials have stepped up their urging of the Fed to lower rates.
On top of that, the Israel-Iran conflict threatens
to destabilize the global energy picture, providing yet another variable
through which to navigate policy.
“We expect Chair Powell to repeat his message from the May
press conference,” Bhave said. “Policy is in a good place, and there is no
hurry for the Fed to act.”
However, the landscape could change quickly.
While the unemployment rate remains low at 4.2%, the May
nonfarm payrolls report showed a continuing, if gradual softening in
the labor market.
The most recent inflation data also indicated that
tariffs have done little to affect prices at least on a macro scale, adding
another incentive for the Fed to at least think about easing.
“We’re in a disinflating world,” former Dallas Fed President
Robert Kaplan said in a CNBC interview last week.
“If it weren’t for these prospective tariffs that will flow
through and are flowing through, I think the Fed would be on their front foot
looking to cut rates”, he added.
As things stand heading into the meeting, markets are
pricing in the next cut to come in September, which would be the one-year
anniversary of a surprisingly aggressive half-percentage-point reduction the
FOMC instituted amid concerns over the labor market.
The committee added two more quarter-point moves by the end
of the year and has been on hold since.
In the current climate, “trade tensions have diminished
somewhat, inflation has been low, and the hard data have shown only limited
signs of softening,” Goldman Sachs economist David Mericle wrote.
Goldman sees the Fed sticking with its two-cut forecast, but
the firm’s economists said they expect ultimately to see only one.
“We are confident that we are still on track for eventual
rate cuts because aside from the tariffs, the inflation news has actually been
fairly soft”, Mericle said.
While an earlier cut is possible, the peak summer tariff
effects on the monthly inflation prints will most likely be too fresh for the
FOMC to cut before December,” Mericle added.
Officials will also update their projections for employment,
inflation, and gross domestic product growth.
Goldman sees the FOMC taking up the inflation expectation to
3% for all of 2024, 0.2% higher than March.
The firm also sees a slight lowering of GDP growth to 1.5%
from 1.7% and a tick higher in the unemployment rate to 4.5%.
Officials will then use the summer to watch the data and
judge from there what it will do later in the year, said Krishna Guha, head of
global policy and central bank strategy at Evercore ISI.
“We think the FOMC will maintain its wait-and-see posture at its June meeting Wednesday, underline it still expects to learn a lot more about the evolving outlook over the next several months, and continue to point to September as the next decision point on rates,” Guha said in a note.
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