Fed holds rates steady, signals possible hike before year end
The Federal Reserve left interest rates unchanged at a range of 3.5% to 3.75% on Wednesday, a decision unanimously supported by its voting committee, while signaling a possible rate hike before the end of the year. US stock markets dropped after the announcement, with the Dow closing 500 points lower and the S&P 500 and Nasdaq each down over 1.2%. The Fed’s statement noted that “economic activity is expanding at a solid pace despite elevated uncertainty” partly due to the conflict in the Middle East, and acknowledged that “inflation remains elevated relative to the committee’s 2% goal.” This was the first meeting overseen by new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh, who took over in May and announced plans to create five taskforces to assess monetary policy, including communications. The Fed also released projections showing nine members anticipate at least one rate increase this year, a shift from March when 12 of 19 officials projected at least one rate cut by year’s end. Warsh emphasized that monetary policy “cannot have a very significant effect on particularly prices,” and declined to answer whether he had met with President Trump since starting his term.
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Sources: The Guardian
