logo
US Fed keeps interest rates unchanged in face of Trump criticism

US Fed keeps interest rates unchanged in face of Trump criticism

RNZ News3 days ago

Fed chair Jerome Powell told reporters he wants to wait a few months to see how tariffs affect inflation, spending and hiring.
Photo:
SAUL LOEB / AFP
The US Federal Reserve held interest rates steady for a fourth consecutive meeting on Wednesday, forecasting higher inflation and cooler growth this year as President Donald Trump's
tariffs begin to take hold
and
geopolitical uncertainty swirls
.
Fed chair Jerome Powell told reporters the central bank would make better decisions if it waited a few months to understand how tariffs impact inflation, spending and hiring, in a sign that the next rate adjustment could take some time to materialise.
For now, he expects to learn more "over the summer," while officials appear increasingly divided on whether they can cut interest rates at all in 2025.
The Fed kept the benchmark lending rate at a range between 4.25 percent and 4.50 percent at the end of its two-day meeting, with officials pencilling in two rate reductions this year, similar to earlier projections.
But there was growing divergence among Fed officials participating in the meeting, with a smaller majority expecting the central bank to lower rates at least twice.
Donald Trump's imposition of tariffs is being cited as a reason for the US Fed to keep interest rates unchanged.
Photo:
AFP / Brendan Smialowski
The Fed's decision is likely to draw the ire of Trump, who has repeatedly pressured the independent central bank for rate cuts and on Wednesday called Powell "stupid" for not slashing rates more quickly.
"We have a stupid person, frankly, at the Fed," Trump said, hours before the bank was due to release its policy decision.
"We have no inflation, we have only success, and I'd like to see interest rates get down," he added, speaking at the White House. "Maybe I should go to the Fed. Am I allowed to appoint myself?"
The Fed said in a statement that "uncertainty about the economic outlook has diminished but remains elevated."
The central bank also cut its expectations for economic growth this year and raised its inflation and unemployment forecasts, in its first updated projections since Trump in April unleashed sweeping 10 percent tariffs on almost all trading partners.
"Increases in tariffs this year are likely to push up prices and weigh on economic activity," Powell said.
Avoiding a more persistent impact depends on the size of levies' effects, how long it takes for them to pass through to prices, and keeping expectations anchored, he added.
Powell maintained that the Fed was "well-positioned to wait to learn more" before considering changes to interest rates.
"Because the economy is still solid, we can take the time to actually see what's going to happen," Powell said. "We'll make smarter and better decisions if we just wait a couple of months."
The Fed's call was in line with analysts' expectations.
As officials anticipate more clarity on the impact associated with higher tariffs over the summer, "financial markets are not expecting any movement in rates prior to September", said KPMG chief economist Diane Swonk.
Major US indexes ended little-changed on Wednesday.
Ryan Sweet, chief US economist at Oxford Economics, said the Fed would want evidence that inflation was headed back to its two percent target "before sounding all clear".
"Pre-emptive rate cuts don't appear to be on the table, implying the bar is high for the central bank to cut in July," Sweet said.
Swonk said however "there is a very strong argument that absent the tariff-induced inflation, the Fed would be cutting rates now," noting that the labour market was slowing.
On Wednesday, the Fed cut its expectations for 2025 economic growth to 1.4 percent from its March projection of 1.7 percent.
It also raised its inflation forecast to 3.0 percent and that of the unemployment rate to 4.5 percent.
Asked about conflict in the Middle East as a clash between Israel and Iran heats up, Powell said that although it was possible to see higher energy prices, these "don't generally tend to have lasting effects on inflation".
Trump has pointed to benign US inflation in arguing for cuts.
More recently, he cast such a move as a way for the country to "pay much less interest on debt coming due", overlooking the fact that lower interest rates usually raise consumer prices.
Powell has maintained that the Fed's rate-setting committee would make its decisions solely on objective and non-political analysis.
-AFP

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Elon Musk's SpaceX rockets keep blowing up at worst possible time
Elon Musk's SpaceX rockets keep blowing up at worst possible time

RNZ News

time2 days ago

  • RNZ News

Elon Musk's SpaceX rockets keep blowing up at worst possible time

By Hadas Gold , CNN Another SpaceX Starship goes up in flames. Photo: NASASpaceflight Analysis: As Elon Musk returns his focus to his businesses, one of his most important companies just had another setback: a SpaceX Starship rocket exploded in an immense fireball on Wednesday during a routine ground test. The explosion marks the fourth failure in a row for SpaceX's Starship, all while Musk's other companies and his personal brand struggle to recover after his foray into politics. Starship is supposed to help reach NASA's goal of bringing American astronauts back to the moon by 2027: The US space agency is paying SpaceX up to about US$4 billion for the mission. Although SpaceX has said that the last three launches before Wednesday's explosions were successful in testing some elements, all ended in mid-flight failures. SpaceX has long made the case that failures during the testing and development phase are not the harbingers of disaster they may seem. The company embraces a design philosophy called "rapid iterative development" that emphasises building relatively low-cost prototypes and launching frequent test flights. SpaceX believes the approach allows the company to hash out rocket designs faster and at cheaper price points than relying on slower, more methodical engineering approaches that can guarantee a vehicle's success. But the very fiery Starship explosion comes as Musk has been trying to restore his reputation as he returned to focus on his businesses after a controversial stint in the Trump administration. After several months as a top White House adviser and leading the Department of government Efficiency, Musk is now taking a step back from full-time government work refocusing his time on his companies, including Tesla, which has struggled in part as a result of Musk's alliance with the Trump administration. Upon his return, Musk has sought to promote an image of safety and reliability at Tesla, which is aiming to launch its driverless robotaxis in Austin on Sunday - although the initial phase is expected to be limited to less than two dozen cars, and Musk has warned the date could shift. But before the launch, a group of Texas lawmakers have asked Tesla to delay the rollout of its robotaxi service until September, citing a new law on autonomous driving set to take effect. And Tesla's share price slipped this week, before recovering somewhat, following a report from Business Insider that the company plans to pause production on Cybertruck and Model Y lines for a week at its Austin factory for maintenance, the third such shutdown this year. And in Europe, where Tesla sales have been plunging, Chinese car maker BYD sold more pure battery electric vehicles over Tesla in Europe for the first time, according to a report from JATO , an automotive market research firm. Elon Musk Photo: AFP Musk also has his work cut out for him at his AI company, xAI. Bloomberg reported the company "is burning through US$1 billion a month" as the cost of building out its AI model "races ahead of the limited revenues." Musk brushed off the report. "Bloomberg is talking nonsense," he posted on X in response. They don't. Also, Bloomberg is talking nonsense. Musk also publicly disputed his own AI chatbot Grok, when it posted a fact check about politically motivated violence, noting that "Since 2016, data suggests right-wing political violence has been more frequent and deadly." That response lines up with most publicly available data. But Musk didn't agree. "Major fail, as this is objectively false. Grok is parroting legacy media. Working on it." he posted . Musk seems to be brushing off the setbacks, especially with SpaceX. He said last month that he hoped Starship would make its inaugural flight to Mars by the end of next year - a target that looks increasingly unlikely to be met. "Just a scratch," he posted after Starship's explosion before posting "RIP Ship 36" and memes. When a user asked Musk's chatbot Grok why Musk was posting memes, Grok responded "The timing suggests it's likely a humorous comment on the SpaceX Starship explosion that occurred on June 18, rather than targeting a specific person. Musk often uses memes to downplay such setbacks." Musk responded with a bullseye emoji. -CNN

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store