The Fed is of the view that inflation is receding toward its 2 percent target. The blue line in the chart below shows that core PCE inflation was 2.8 percent over the twelve months ending in September 2025 (latest data). Although this is the same rate of inflation as a year earlier, the Fed argues … Continue reading Is the Fed Holding Back Disinflation?
The Tough Job Ahead for the Fed
The Fed’s job of achieving the dual mandate of maximum employment and price stability has not gotten any easier of late. Tariff policy and intensified criticism of the Fed from the Administration is adding to policy uncertainty which, as shown in the chart below, is rivaling the periods of the financial crisis and the COVID … Continue reading The Tough Job Ahead for the Fed
Despite the Worries, No Recession Is Imminent
The release of the 0.5 percent drop in real GDP in the first quarter of this year amplified concerns about the economy sliding into a recession. While data show clearly that the economy slowed in the first quarter, it seems unlikely that GDP actually fell. The scurry to beat tariffs by importing goods ahead of … Continue reading Despite the Worries, No Recession Is Imminent
Recent Market Turmoil and Fed Policy?
With investors’ nerves fraying, there has been a sell-off in the stock market and a flight to safety in Treasury securities. The chart below shows that the S&P 500 index of share prices has fallen 3-1/2 percent from the end of 2024, erasing $1.3 trillion of household wealth. Market analysts have attributed the turmoil in … Continue reading Recent Market Turmoil and Fed Policy?
AI, Growth, and Implications for Fed Policy
Few developments have received the attention that artificial intelligence (AI) has received in recent years. Much of that attention has been focused on concerns about job losses, invasions of privacy, and the dangers of self-driving cars, trucks, and buses. Although often forgotten, AI has been around for some time. Computers have been performing highly complex … Continue reading AI, Growth, and Implications for Fed Policy
Momentum
A short while ago, the thinking inside and outside the Fed was that the economy was slowing, the labor market was cooling, and underlying inflation was on a clear downward path to the 2 percent target. Concern had been growing that the pendulum might be swinging too far in the direction of labor market cooling … Continue reading Momentum
Has the Labor Market Returned to Balance?
Financial market participants and observers greeted the jobs report for June with enthusiasm. The 206 thousand increase in employment, shown in the chart below, was coupled with a 54 thousand downward revision to employment gains in May. Many analysts saw this as a gradual slowing in hiring. Moreover, the unemployment rate climbed higher in June to 4.1 … Continue reading Has the Labor Market Returned to Balance?
Back On The Soft Landing Path?
The April CPI numbers were in line with the expectations of market participants. This inflation news seemingly confirmed to market participants that underlying inflation is in the process of falling — after three consecutive months of unwelcome upside surprises. Moreover, other news on the economy was viewed as suggesting that growth has slowed, the labor market has … Continue reading Back On The Soft Landing Path?
The Remaining Inflation Problem
The release of CPI for January again dashed optimism for continued disinflation and near-term rate declines by the Fed. Now, market participants foresee the Fed’s first cut in rates coming around mid-year instead of the spring and the cumulative cut in rates of 75 to 100 basis points in 2024 (100 basis points equal one … Continue reading The Remaining Inflation Problem
Time for the Fed to Pause?
The issue: The Fed has sent out signals that it is inclined to pause rate hikes at its upcoming June meeting after successive increases over the past ten FOMC meetings dating back to March 2022 (see chart below). The cumulative increase in the target for the federal funds rate has been 500 basis points (100 … Continue reading Time for the Fed to Pause?