Fed begins policy meeting amid Middle East tensions and slowing US economy
Federal Reserve policymakers will begin a two-day meeting on Tuesday with escalating tensions in the Middle East risking a new commodity price shock and fresh US data expected to show a drop in retail sales and sluggish factory output in May.
The US central bank is widely anticipated to leave its benchmark overnight interest rate in the 4.25 per cent-4.50 per cent range, where it has been since December, and repeat that it can’t give much guidance until it is clearer whether President Donald Trump’s import tariffs and fiscal policies push inflation higher, undercut growth, or – as his administration contends will happen – keep growth on track while prices ease. Trump has demanded immediate rate cuts.
Several days of intense missile exchanges between Israel and Iran, however, presented the Fed with even more reason for caution after oil prices jumped and presented a possible new source of inflation, though crude oil indices were declining along with US bond yields on Monday after reports that the Iranian government was seeking talks with the US and Israel to end the conflict. Major US equity indices rose.
Still, the fighting highlighted the uncertainty Fed officials say has gripped their policy debate since Trump returned to power in January and unveiled a far more aggressive effort than expected to raise import taxes and rewrite global trade rules.
Fed officials have largely expected that Trump’s trade policies will have a stagflationary effect on the US economy, simultaneously slowing growth and raising prices, with the monetary policy path – whether rate cuts or an extended hold of borrowing costs at the current level – dependent on which problem seems to be more serious.
Retail sales and industrial production data due to be released on Tuesday morning could add weight to the evidence the economy is slowing.
Economists polled by Reuters expect retail sales fell 0.7 per cent in May after recent months where households appeared to rush some purchases to avoid coming import levies, while industrial output is forecast to rise just 0.1 per cent.
“Consumers likely took a break from spending in May following a strong increase in March and a lackluster April,” said Scott Anderson, chief US economist at BMO. He added that he expects industrial production fell slightly over the month due to “trade war uncertainty, rising input prices, and slowing US and global demand.”
The Fed will issue a new policy statement as well as updated projections for the economy and the benchmark interest rate at 2 p.m. EDT (1800 GMT) on Wednesday, with Fed Chair Jerome Powell scheduled to hold a press conference half an hour later.
FED FORECASTS
The central bank’s Summary of Economic Projections may draw more attention than the policy decision itself, as analysts and investors look for evidence of how Fed officials’ views of the outlook have changed since their last set of projections in March, before the scope of Trump’s tariff plans became clear but also before he delayed some of the stiffest levies in the face of largely negative market reaction.
Fed officials in March marked down their expectations for economic growth this year and raised their level of expected inflation, but left unchanged the median outlook for two quarter-percentage-point rate cuts this year. Though that rate outlook matched the one in December, the spread of views in the Fed’s “dot plot” chart narrowed, and some analysts anticipate a further hawkish shift in light of the central bank’s emphasis on keeping inflation controlled and expectations that Trump’s new tariffs still will lead to price increases.
“Trade policy developments have likely led to a significant change in Fed forecasts,” towards even slower growth and higher inflation this year than expected as of March, Michael Feroli, chief US economist at JP Morgan, wrote on Friday.
“These stagflationary revisions don’t point to a clear direction of the revision to the dots. Even so, we think the dots will revise in a modestly hawkish direction” with only a single rate cut this year.