Berliner Boersenzeitung - US Fed expected to pause rate cuts again, await clarity on tariffs

EUR -
AED 4.100273
AFN 78.60757
ALL 98.166966
AMD 432.286638
ANG 1.997847
AOA 1023.661719
ARS 1274.492205
AUD 1.739351
AWG 2.012159
AZN 1.902168
BAM 1.95574
BBD 2.26123
BDT 136.075794
BGN 1.960574
BHD 0.420487
BIF 3332.496993
BMD 1.116315
BND 1.454255
BOB 7.738761
BRL 6.322034
BSD 1.119965
BTN 95.745041
BWP 15.144532
BYN 3.665087
BYR 21879.783696
BZD 2.24963
CAD 1.559549
CDF 3204.942189
CHF 0.935299
CLF 0.027413
CLP 1051.967484
CNY 8.048081
CNH 8.048713
COP 4704.554582
CRC 567.282465
CUC 1.116315
CUP 29.582361
CVE 110.261592
CZK 24.899757
DJF 199.433835
DKK 7.461011
DOP 65.907963
DZD 148.865399
EGP 55.928271
ERN 16.744732
ETB 151.194627
FJD 2.537725
FKP 0.83994
GBP 0.840567
GEL 3.05914
GGP 0.83994
GHS 13.887571
GIP 0.83994
GMD 80.937172
GNF 9698.700213
GTQ 8.598734
GYD 234.312757
HKD 8.722499
HNL 29.141099
HRK 7.532941
HTG 146.54547
HUF 402.867531
IDR 18412.786848
ILS 3.96752
IMP 0.83994
INR 95.543378
IQD 1467.15465
IRR 47010.84053
ISK 145.891703
JEP 0.83994
JMD 178.534481
JOD 0.791807
JPY 162.594147
KES 144.755526
KGS 97.622219
KHR 4481.861466
KMF 492.857526
KPW 1004.7411
KRW 1561.859763
KWD 0.343145
KYD 0.933371
KZT 571.02235
LAK 24221.251321
LBP 100346.698283
LKR 335.109642
LRD 223.983077
LSL 20.217275
LTL 3.29619
LVL 0.675249
LYD 6.178809
MAD 10.389879
MDL 19.509397
MGA 5019.844837
MKD 61.528098
MMK 2343.6765
MNT 3999.013199
MOP 9.015121
MRU 44.32763
MUR 51.47373
MVR 17.25866
MWK 1941.939975
MXN 21.73009
MYR 4.795735
MZN 71.336723
NAD 20.217275
NGN 1788.71739
NIO 41.208726
NOK 11.593835
NPR 153.192265
NZD 1.897963
OMR 0.429497
PAB 1.119965
PEN 4.129072
PGK 4.654856
PHP 62.294316
PKR 315.375252
PLN 4.268991
PYG 8941.723611
QAR 4.081974
RON 5.106255
RSD 117.226377
RUB 90.497203
RWF 1603.750428
SAR 4.186829
SBD 9.31055
SCR 15.922308
SDG 670.351558
SEK 10.907859
SGD 1.452108
SHP 0.877249
SLE 25.344455
SLL 23408.578004
SOS 640.080215
SRD 40.8365
STD 23105.476908
SVC 9.799697
SYP 14514.261285
SZL 20.222375
THB 37.223582
TJS 11.546543
TMT 3.912686
TND 3.376696
TOP 2.614527
TRY 43.377235
TTD 7.596765
TWD 33.732379
TZS 3021.006621
UAH 46.488763
UGX 4097.873335
USD 1.116315
UYU 46.59856
UZS 14520.55117
VES 105.163869
VND 28936.572095
VUV 133.952878
WST 3.099125
XAF 655.936725
XAG 0.034581
XAU 0.000349
XCD 3.016899
XDR 0.815775
XOF 655.936725
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.496621
ZAR 20.143411
ZMK 10048.183034
ZMW 30.104069
ZWL 359.453134
  • RBGPF

    1.5000

    64.5

    +2.33%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    22.05

    -0.23%

  • SCS

    0.0000

    10.5

    0%

  • BCC

    0.9200

    91.91

    +1%

  • CMSD

    0.0472

    22.06

    +0.21%

  • NGG

    1.2500

    71.28

    +1.75%

  • RELX

    0.5300

    54.57

    +0.97%

  • BCE

    -0.0700

    21.56

    -0.32%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0900

    10.7

    -0.84%

  • GSK

    0.4991

    37.64

    +1.33%

  • JRI

    0.1600

    12.9

    +1.24%

  • VOD

    0.1800

    9.45

    +1.9%

  • RIO

    -0.1100

    62.64

    -0.18%

  • BTI

    1.2700

    42.64

    +2.98%

  • BP

    0.1300

    29.76

    +0.44%

  • AZN

    0.8500

    68.81

    +1.24%

US Fed expected to pause rate cuts again, await clarity on tariffs
US Fed expected to pause rate cuts again, await clarity on tariffs / Photo: KAMIL KRZACZYNSKI - AFP/File

US Fed expected to pause rate cuts again, await clarity on tariffs

The US Federal Reserve is widely expected to extend a recent pause in rate cuts this week as it waits to see how President Donald Trump's stop-start tariff rollout affects the health of the world's largest economy.

Text size:

Trump has imposed steep levies on China, and lower "baseline" levies of 10 percent on goods from most other countries, along with 25 percent duties on specific items like steel, automobiles and aluminum.

The president has also paused higher duties on dozens of other trading partners until July to give them time to renegotiate existing arrangements with the United States.

Most economists expect the tariffs introduced since January to push up prices and cool economic growth -- at least in the short run -- potentially keeping the Fed on hold for longer.

"The Fed has to be very focused on maintaining inflation so that it doesn't start moving back up in a more persistent way," said Loretta Mester, who recently stepped down after a decade as president of the Cleveland Fed.

"That would undermine all the work that was done over the last three years of getting inflation down," she told AFP.

- 'Good place to be' -

Trump reiterated his call for Fed chair Jerome Powell to lower rates in an NBC interview published in full on Sunday, claiming the decision not to do so was largely personal.

"Well, he should lower them. And at some point, he will. He'd rather not because he's not a fan of mine," Trump said.

The Fed has held its key interest rate at between 4.25 percent and 4.50 percent since December, as it continues its plan to bring inflation to the bank's long-term target of two percent, with another eye firmly fixed on keeping unemployment under control.

Recent data points to the Fed's inflation remaining broadly on track ahead of the introduction of Trump's "Liberation Day" tariffs, while unemployment has remained relatively stable, hugging close to historic lows.

At the same time, various "softer" data points such as consumer confidence surveys have reflected a sharp decline in optimism about the health of the US economy -- and growing concerns about inflation.

"Whether the economy enters a recession or not, it's hard to say at this point," said Mester, now an adjunct professor of finance at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania.

"I think the committee remains in good condition here, and most likely they'll remain on hold at this meeting," said Jim Bullard, the long-serving former president of the St. Louis Fed.

"I think it's a good place for them to be while there's a lot of turbulence in the trade war," added Bullard, now dean of the Daniels School of Business at Purdue University.

Financial markets overwhelmingly expect the Fed to announce another rate-cut pause on Wednesday, according to data from CME Group.

- Pushing back rate cuts -

US hiring data for April published last week came in better than expected, lowering anxiety about the health of the labor market -- and reducing pressure on the Fed's rate-setting committee to reach for rate cuts.

Economists at several large banks including Goldman Sachs and Barclays subsequently delayed their expected date for rate cuts from June to July.

"Cutting in late July allows the committee to see more data on the evolution of the labor market, and should benefit from resolving uncertainty about tariffs and fiscal policy," economists at Barclays wrote in a note to clients published Friday.

Other analysts see rate cuts happening even later, depending on the effects of the tariffs.

"A slower reaction to economic weakness" could happen "if backward-looking data gives the impression of resilient demand while inflation gauges heat up," wrote EY Chief Economist Gregory Daco.

The rise in longer-run inflation expectations in the survey data points to growing concerns that tariff-related price pressures could become embedded in the US economy -- even as the market-based measures have remained close to the Fed's two percent target.

"I would be sort of in the camp (saying) prove to me that they're not going to be inflationary," Mester said of tariffs, adding that it would be "unwise" to assume that inflation expectations were stable, given the recent survey data.

But Bullard from Purdue took a different view, stressing the stability of the market-based measures.

"I haven't liked the survey-based measures of inflation expectations, because they seem to be partly about inflation but partly about many other issues, maybe, including politics," he said.

"This is a moment where you might want to look through the survey-based measures that are talking about very extreme levels of inflation that don't seem likely to develop near-term," he added.

(L.Kaufmann--BBZ)