By Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Data this week offered the U.S. Federal Reserve good news on two fronts but policymakers haven’t openly shifted views yet about the timing of rate cuts investors are convinced will start this year.
Comments from Fed officials including the vice chair of the rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee, New York Fed President John Williams, acknowledged the positive turn this week when U.S. government agencies reported that consumer prices rose more slowly than expected in April, and that retail spending had not increased at all during the month in a possible sign consumers are pulling back.
But that hasn’t yet prompted policymakers to say anything concrete about when rates might fall, indicating as did Fed Chair Jerome Powell earlier in the week that while the baseline outlook remained for inflation to fall, they didn’t trust it fully after three months in which inflation data disappointed.
“I don’t see any indicators now telling me … there’s a reason to change the stance of monetary policy now,” Williams said in an interview with Reuters, adding that he did not expect the case for a rate cut to fall into place “in the very near term.”
In comments on CNBC on Thursday, Richmond Fed President Thomas Barkin said the April retail sales number still means spending was growing at a “good” pace even if not a “great” one, noting that firms particularly in the service sector tell him they continue to plan price increases.
“I do believe we are on the right path. I do believe inflation is coming down,” Barkin said.
But “to get to 2% sustainably it is going to take a little bit more time,” he said, with more of the “edge” coming off of consumer demand, and businesses on the services side of the economy getting the message, as many in the goods sector have received, that customers will stop buying if prices get too high.
“Customers and competitors are going to have to teach people that they don’t have pricing power,” Barkin said.
Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester said she still regarded progress on inflation this year as “disappointing” and, pointing to a recent rise in public expectations about near-term inflation, added that if long-term expectations also begin to increase the Fed may need to be open to further rate increases.
Holding the policy rate at the 5.25% to 5.5% range where it has been since July “is prudent…as we gain clarity about the path of inflation,” Mester said. “Should developments in inflation and inflation expectations warrant it, policymakers will need to be open to tightening policy further.”
Like other policymakers, however, Mester said that was not her base case, and the April Consumer Price Index report was the first in four months that arguably boosted policymakers’ faith that the drop in inflation seen last year might resume and become steady enough to bring their 2% inflation target within reach.
Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee said in particular that slowed shelter inflation in April left him “optimistic” the pace of price increases will continue to drop.
Yet the flow of data between now and the Fed’s upcoming meetings leaves officials with a narrow window to build the case for a rate cut any time before the central bank’s September 17-18 meeting – the current betting favorite among investors in contracts tied to the Fed’s policy rate.
Between now and the Fed’s June 11-12 meeting, policymakers will receive just one additional report on the Personal Consumption Expenditures price index, the statistic used to set the 2% inflation target. The index rose at a 2.7% annual rate as of March, and, with many of the components of the April release already in hand, analysts expect little if any change when the new data is published on May 31.
By their July 30-31 meeting, however, officials will have received a full suite of data about the economy’s performance through the first half of the year, including inflation and job reports through June, and a report on economic growth and employment costs for the second quarter of the year.
If data continues to show inflation declining, that could allow policymakers to amend what has been a standing reference in their policy statement to “elevated” inflation, a change analysts say will be needed to open the door to rate cuts.
The July meeting will be followed in August by the Fed’s annual research conference in Jackson Hole, a forum Fed chairs have often used to shape public expectations about monetary policy.
In a sign of the primacy inflation still holds in the global policy debate, however, the International Monetary Fund on Thursday cautioned the Fed not to move too soon.
“The recent inflation data are overall higher than we would like to see,” said IMF spokesperson Julie Kozack. “This reinforces the need for the Fed to be cautious.”
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Andrea Ricci)
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