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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Fed officials face weak inflation, but split over what it means

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WASHINGTON/SAN FRANCISCO: US Federal Reserve officials were divided over how seriously to treat a slide in inflation, with one top policymaker saying the Fed was “close” to its inflation target and three others warning the weak price increases posed major risks the Fed may need to attack with lower interest rates. Just how deep that division is and where in the debate the most influential policymakers have staked their ground is going to grip the financial world between now and the conclusion of the Fed’s next meeting on July 31. Interest rate futures markets currently see a 100 per cent probability of a rate cut then, with the only debate in trading circles over whether the cut will 25 basis points or twice that.


Policymakers’ rate projections issued on Wednesday showed a near clean break at the Fed. Roughly half of officials see no rate reduction as likely appropriate this year, and roughly half see a cut of up to half a percentage point as probably warranted — a split that may turn on how quickly officials feel they should act.


The division took shape on Friday, in the first hours after the lifting of the central bank’s formal “blackout” for commenting on the results of the last two-day policy session, which concluded on Wednesday with the Fed leaving rates on hold in a range between 2.25 and 2.5 per cent.


“The economy’s baseline outlook is good — sustained growth, a strong labour market and inflation near our objective,” Fed vice chairman Richard Clarida said on Friday in an interview with Bloomberg Television.


Clarida said there was “broad agreement” that the case for rate cuts had grown stronger in recent weeks. He also said the Fed was ready to act “as appropriate,” a phrase emphasised by Chairman Jerome Powell earlier this month as markets slid over broad global growth and trade concerns.


But Clarida’s description of the current 1.5 per cent inflation rate expected this year as “close” to the Fed’s 2 per cent target suggested less compulsion to move soon.


Powell, asked after this week’s policy meeting about the danger of delaying any policy move, said “I don’t think the risk of waiting too long is prominent right now.”


Others seemed to disagree.


“Recent indicators of inflation and inflation expectations have been disappointing,” Fed Governor Lael Brainard said on Friday in prepared remarks to a Fed conference in Ohio. With rates so low by historic standards, “basic principles of risk management... would argue for softening the expected path of policy when risks shift to the downside.”


Other problems have cropped up for the Fed, most notably the unpredictable path of US trade negotiations, and signs that global economic growth may be slowing. US economic data has also been choppy, with a weak recent jobs report and signs the manufacturing sector is slowing.


But the shortfall of inflation from the Fed’s 2 per cent target has become a persistent problem for the Fed, putting its credibility and the performance of the economy at stake. — Reuters


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