Federal Reserve: ‘Substantial majority’ of Fed favoured large cut in Sept

Washington: A “substantial majority” of US Federal Reserve officials at the central bank’s September meeting supported beginning an era of easier monetary policy with an outsized half-point rate cut, but there appeared even broader agreement that the initial move would not commit the Fed to any particular pace of rate reductions in the future, according to just-released minutes of the two-day session.

Supporters of the half-point cut “observed that such a recalibration of the stance of monetary policy would begin to bring it into better alignment with recent indicators of inflation and the labour market”, said the minutes of the September 17-18 session, at which the Fed lowered the benchmark policy rate to a range of 4.75% to 5.00% from the 5.25% to 5.50% range it had maintained since July of 2023. Others noted there had been a “plausible case” to have cut rates at the July meeting and the data since then had only buttressed the case for easier policy.

“Some” participants, however, supported only a quarter-point cut, while “a few others indicated they could have supported such a decision”.

The minutes provided further detail on the breadth of opinion within the Federal Reserve as policymakers approved a rate cut of a size usually reserved for moments when the central bank is worried the economy is slowing fast and needs the support of looser financial conditions.

In this instance, Fed policymakers have referred to their initial cut as a “recalibration” of monetary policy to account for the fact that inflation has fallen sharply from the high levels seen in 2022 and 2023, and by some measures is near the Fed’s 2% target even as the economy remains relatively strong. “It was important to communicate,” the minutes said, that the move “not be interpreted as evidence of a less favourable economic outlook.”

Still, concern about the labour market has been rising among Fed policymakers, with officials noting recent increases in the unemployment rate, and weak job and inflation readings in July and August. Rate reductions could continue, Fed officials said at the meeting, as long as inflation continues to decline, with the pace and endpoint still open to discussion.

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