Fed policymakers say they are ready to start cutting interest rates

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Federal Reserve policymakers on Friday signalled that they are ready to kick off a series of interest rate cuts at the US central bank’s meeting in two weeks, noting a cooling in the labour market that could accelerate into something more dire in the absence of a policy shift. Their remarks were widely seen as endorsing a quarter-percentage-point reduction in the Fed’s policy rate, and leaving the door open to further and perhaps bigger moves should the job market continue to slow down. Policymakers have kept the Fed’s benchmark borrowing rate in the current 5.

25 per cent-5.50 per cent range since July 2023 after an aggressive rate-hiking campaign that began 18 months earlier in response to a surge in inflation. Inflation by the Fed’s preferred measure is now well down from its mid-2022 peak of around 7 per cent.



The unemployment rate, at 3.5 per cent when the Fed stopped raising rates, has now risen to 4.2 per cent, and monthly job growth has slowed.

US central bankers have turned the monetary policy page, completing their shift to a focus on supporting jobs from what had been a singular focus on bringing down inflation. “It is now appropriate to dial down the degree of restrictiveness in the stance of policy by reducing the target range for the federal funds rate,” New York Fed President John Williams said at a Council on Foreign Relations event. Speaking at the University of Notre Dame, Fed Governor Christopher Waller went further, saying he could support back-to-back cuts, or bigger cuts, if the data suggests the need.

“I was a big advocate of front-loading rate hikes when inflation accelerated in 2022, and I will be an advocate of front-loading rate cuts if that is appropriate,” Waller said. Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee, who has for months signaled he thinks rates need to come down, also said he wants to calibrate policy based on data as it comes in. “I don’t think what happens at the next meeting alone is what’s the most important,” Goolsbee said in an interview with CNBC, adding that it would be critical for the Fed to understand the trend of the data over the next several policy meetings.

Analysts said the message was clear. “Fed leadership sees a 25-basis-point cut as the base case for the September meeting but is open to 50 basis-point cuts at subsequent meetings if the labour market continues to deteriorate” Goldman Sachs economists said in their summary of what will be the last public remarks on monetary policy by Fed officials before their Sept 17-18 meeting. Two weeks ago, Fed Chair Jerome Powell touched off intense speculation about the size of a September rate cut when he said “the time has come” to ease policy.

Waller echoed Powell’s choice of phrase on Friday, and added that “it is likely that a series of reductions will be appropriate.” “But the sky is not falling, the floor is not shaking ..

. and making a 50-basis-point cut will send an incorrect signal to the market” that the economy is falling apart, he said. “And they don’t want to do that.

”.