Home / Business / Fed’s Hammack signals holding rates steady for months: report

Fed’s Hammack signals holding rates steady for months: report

Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland President Beth Hammack said she saw no need to change US interest rates for months ahead after the central bank cut borrowing costs at its last three meetings, the Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday.

Hammack opposed recent rate cuts as she is more worried about elevated inflation than the potential labor-market fragility that prompted officials to lower rates by a cumulative 75 basis points over the past few months, the report added.

Hammack told the Journal that the Fed didn’t need to change its benchmark interest rate, currently in a range between 3.5% and 3.75%, at least until the spring.


Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland president Beth Hammack addresses The ECNY.
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland President Beth Hammack said the central bank does not have to cut interest rates in the coming months. REUTERS

By then, Hammack said, it would be able to better assess whether recent goods price inflation was receding as President Trump’s tariffs are more fully digested through the supply chain, the report said.

Hammack said that November’s consumer price index of 2.7% probably understated 12-month price growth due to data distortions, the report added.

“My base case is that we can stay here for some period of time, until we get clearer evidence that either inflation is coming back down to target or the employment side is weakening more materially,” Hammack told the Journal in a podcast interview recorded on Thursday, citing inflation concerns.


The Marriner S. Eccles Federal Reserve Board Building in Washington D.C., the headquarters of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.
The Fed’s current benchmark lending rate is between 3.5% and 3.75%. Roman Babakin – stock.adobe.com

Speaking at an event in Cincinnati earlier this month, Hammack said she wanted to focus on high inflation and that she would prefer monetary policy to be tighter.

Hammack said the current policy rate was right, around a neutral level, but would prefer a slightly more restrictive stance to help put more pressure on inflation.

Hammack will be a voting member of the Federal Open Market Committee next year, which oversees important decisions regarding monetary policy and interest rates.

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