San Francisco Chronicle

Divided Fed slashes rates again

- By Martin Crutsinger

WASHINGTON — A sharply divided Federal Reserve cut its benchmark interest rate Wednesday for a second time this year but declined to signal that further rate cuts are likely this year.

The Fed’s move reduced its key shortterm rate — which influences many consumer and business loans — by an additional quarterpoi­nt to a range of 1.75% to 2%.

The action was approved 73, with two officials preferring to keep rates unchanged and one arguing for a halfpoint cut. It was the most Fed dissents in three years.

The divisions on the policy committee underscore­d the challenges confrontin­g Chairman Jerome Powell in guiding the Fed at time of high uncertaint­y in the U.S. economy.

Stock prices fell after the Fed issued its policy statement, reflecting investor disappoint­ment that the central bank had declined to indicate that more rate cuts were likely this year. The Fed did leave the door open to additional rate

cuts — if, as Powell suggested at a news conference, the economy weakens.

For now, the economic expansion appears durable in its 11th year of growth, with a stillsolid job market and steady consumer spending. But the Fed is trying to combat threats including uncertaint­ies caused by President Trump’s trade war with China, slower global growth and a slump in American manufactur­ing. The Fed noted in its policy statement that business investment and exports have weakened.

At his news conference, Powell acknowledg­ed that Fed officials are sharply divided about the wisest course to take on interest rates.

“This is a time of difficult judgments and disparate perspectiv­es,” the chairman said. “I really do think that is nothing but healthy.”

The Fed’s modest rate cut Wednesday irritated Trump, who has attacked the central bank and insisted that it slash rates more aggressive­ly. The president immediatel­y signaled his discontent:

“Jay Powell and the Federal Reserve Fail Again,” Trump tweeted. “No ‘guts,’ no sense, no vision! A terrible communicat­or!”

Updated economic and interest rate forecasts issued Wednesday by the Fed show that only seven of 17 officials foresee at least one additional rate cut this year. And at least two Fed officials expect a rate increase next year.

None of the policymake­rs foresee rates falling below 1.5% in 2020 — a sign that the turbulence from a global slowdown and Trump’s escalation of the trade war is viewed as manageable.

The median forecasts show the economy is expected to grow a modest 2.2% this year, 2% next year and 1.9% in 2021. Those forecasts are well below the Trump administra­tion’s projection that the president’s policies will accelerate growth to 3% annually or better. But they also suggest that policymake­rs do not envision a recession.

Unemployme­nt is projected to be 3.7% and inflation 1.5%, below the Fed’s target level of 2%

A resumption of trade talks between the Trump administra­tion and Beijing, and a less antagonist­ic tone between the two sides, have supported the view that additional rate cuts might not be necessary. So has a belief that oil prices will remain elevated, that inflation might finally be reaching the Fed’s target level and that there are increasing signs that the U.S. economy remains sturdy.

The job market looks solid, wages are rising, people are still spending and even such sluggish sectors as manufactur­ing and constructi­on have shown signs of rebounding.

Yet no one, perhaps not even those who serve on the Fed, is sure of how interest rate policy will unfold in coming months. There are too many uncertaint­ies, notably the outcome of Trump’s trade war.

Trump, meantime, has kept up a stream of public attacks on the central bank’s actions, including referring to Powell as an “enemy” and the Fed’s policymake­rs as “boneheads.” Even though the economy looks resilient, the president has insisted that the Fed slash its benchmark rate more deeply — even to below zero, as the European Central Bank has done — in part to weaken the dollar and make American exports more competitiv­e.

Powell has said that the policymake­rs remain focused on sustaining the expansion and keeping prices stable without regard to any outside pressures.

The Fed is monitoring the global slowdown, especially in Europe, and Britain’s effort to leave the European Union. A disruptive Brexit could destabiliz­e not just Europe but also the U.S. economy.

U.S. inflation, which has long been dormant, has begun to show signs that it is reaching the Fed’s 2% target and might remain there. If the Fed’s policymake­rs conclude that inflation will sustain a faster pace, it might give them pause about cutting rates much further.

“This is a time of difficult judgments and disparate perspectiv­es. I really do think that is nothing but healthy.” Fed Chairman Jerome Powell

The most serious threat to the expansion is widely seen as Trump’s trade war. The increased import taxes he has imposed on goods from China and Europe — and the countertar­iffs other nations have applied to U.S. exports — have hurt many American companies and halted their plans for investment and expansion.

In recent days, the Trump administra­tion and Beijing have acted to deescalate tensions before a new round of trade talks planned for October in Washington. Yet most analysts foresee no significan­t agreement emerging this fall in the conflict, which is fundamenta­lly over Beijing’s aggressive drive to supplant America’s technologi­cal dominance.

 ?? Patrick Semansky / Associated Press ?? Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell discusses the central bank’s action reducing a key interest rate by a quarter of a point.
Patrick Semansky / Associated Press Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell discusses the central bank’s action reducing a key interest rate by a quarter of a point.
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