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Warsh-led Fed likely to hold rates steady: What new leadership means

The Fed is expected to keep interest rates steady at this week’s policy meeting (the first meeting being held by new Fed Chairman Kevin Warsh); This meeting does little to ease affordability concerns plaguing many U.S. households.

President Donald Trump’s pick to head the central bank has previously indicated he would consider lowering interest rates, but experts say the central bank may be more likely to consider a rate hike because the current inflation rate is roughly twice the Federal Reserve’s long-term target of 2%.

That would put Warsh in opposition to Trump, who has said rates should be much lower. Fed funds futures show virtually no chance of rate cut at June meeting, according to CME FedWatch tool.

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“A Trump-friendly Warsh will likely still try to toe the line between appearing neutral and acknowledging that raises are a possibility,” according to a June 11 research note from Capital Economics.

The Fed’s moves require a delicate balance, as both higher interest rates and higher prices can harm consumers. For now, “Americans should expect interest rates to remain higher than they would like for the foreseeable future,” said Matt Schulz, LendingTree’s chief credit analyst.

‘trimmed average’

Moody’s chief economist Mark Zandi said the assumption was that these price changes were due to “idiosyncratic factors” that would ease rather than persistent inflationary pressures.

“I find it helpful,” Zandi said of the shortened average. “I can say, though, that I’m not sure I can trust it. Some things you thought might be temporary turn out to be permanent.”

That’s an important distinction for interest rate policy: “Baseline” and “trimmed average” benchmarks currently send different signals, said Joe Seydl, senior market economist at JP Morgan Private Bank. He said they were moving in opposite directions, with core inflation rising and the trimmed average shifting downward.

“It’s pretty good for a dove scene right now,” Seydl said. The dovish view suggests the Fed is more likely to cut interest rates.

How does the Fed affect your finances?

Where consumers stand

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