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#FedHoldsRatesSteady
In a widely anticipated move, the Federal Reserve concluded its latest FOMC meeting by leaving the benchmark federal funds rate unchanged at 5.25% – 5.50%, a 23-year high. This marks the X consecutive meeting where the central bank has opted for a pause, signaling a shift from aggressive tightening to a cautious, data‑dependent stance.
Why the pause?
Inflation progress has stalled, with recent readings coming in hotter than expected. The Committee noted that economic activity remains solid, but policymakers want more confidence that inflation is moving sustainably toward 2% before considering cuts.
The dot plot shift
The latest Summary of Economic Projections now signals fewer rate cuts in 2024 (down from three to possibly one or two), reinforcing a “higher for longer” narrative.
Balance sheet update
In a technical but significant move, the Fed will slow quantitative tightening starting in June, reducing the monthly cap on Treasury runoff from $60B to $25B—a subtle easing aimed at avoiding liquidity strain.
Powell’s takeaway
Chair Jerome Powell struck a hawkish‑leaning tone: rate hikes are unlikely as the next move, but cuts are not imminent. The Committee needs “greater confidence” that inflation is under control before easing policy.
Bottom line
The Fed is firmly in a “wait and see” phase. With a resilient labor market and sticky inflation, restrictive policy is here to stay until data forces a change. All eyes now turn to upcoming CPI and jobs reports.
#Fed #InterestRates #Economy #FOMC