The U.S. Federal Reserve is expected to keep  interest rates unchanged this week, deferring any  possible increase until September or December, as  policymakers hold out for more evidence of a  pickup in inflation.    Central to the debate at the Fed’s July  26-27 policy meeting will be how to reconcile  upbeat U.S. economic data, highlighted by strong  job gains in June, with a global growth slowdown  and other headwinds threatening the inflation  trajectory.     For San Francisco Fed President John Williams,  one of the 17 members participating in the central  bank’s rate-setting deliberations, all that  is needed is a bit more confidence that inflation  is indeed headed toward the Fed’s 2 percent  target.    The inflation measure the Fed prefers to track  is currently at 1.6 percent.     With monthly job gains well above the level  needed to prevent an uptick in unemployment, and  no signs of a rise in productivity, some Fed  policymakers are likely to argue for a quick  increase in rates to avoid a surge in  inflation.    “That is the danger – and you can be  sure that the hawks are going to be arguing  that,” said Alan Blinder, a Princeton  University professor and a former Fed vice  chairman. “I have a hunch that they will  talking in July about September.”                        Other policymakers, like influential New York  Fed President William Dudley, have signaled they  would rather wait for more tangible signs of a  rise in inflation before pulling the trigger on a  rate increase.    “There’s not a lot of reason to  raise rates until inflation goes up,” said  Kevin Logan, chief U.S. economist at HSBC in New  York.       The U.S. central bank began its latest policy  meeting Tuesday morning and is scheduled to issue  its statement at 2 p.m. EDT (1800 GMT) on  Wednesday.    HEADWINDS    The Fed raised its benchmark overnight interest  rate in December for the first time in nearly a  decade, and signaled four rate hikes were coming  in 2016 as it moved to “normalize” the  ultra-stimulative monetary policy adopted in  response to the 2007-2009 financial crisis.     But headwinds in the global economy, financial  market volatility and uncertainty over the impact  of Britain’s decision to leave the European  Union forced it to delay a rate hike and scale  back the number of projected hikes to two for the  year.                       Still, absent a shock to markets or a reversal  in U.S. economic data, even dovish policymakers  like Dudley have signaled that their cautious  approach to normalizing monetary policy likely  allows for at least one rate hike this year.     After Wednesday, the Fed has three more policy  meetings scheduled this year – in September,  November and December. A November rate hike is  seen as highly unlikely, as that meeting comes one  week before the U.S. presidential election.    Economists polled by Reuters expect the Fed to  hold rates steady until after the election.    “Rate normalization has fallen down the  Fed priority list and will remain there until the  dust is well settled on the financial markets and  the economy,” Jefferies economists predicted  in a note last week.      (Reporting by Ann Saphir; Additional reporting  by Jonathan Spicer in New York; Editing by Paul  Simao)
Tuesday, July 26, 2016
Fed seen holding rates steady as inflation watch continues – Reuters
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