Fed's Daly says US policy 'slightly restrictive,' next step uncertain

Kitco Media
By Reuters
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Reuters
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July 2 (Reuters) - San Francisco ‌Federal Reserve President Mary Daly said on Thursday that U.S. monetary policy is "slightly restrictive" but that with "exceedingly strong" investment growth in AI-related technology and a stable labor market it's unclear what ​the Fed's next step should be.

"I think there's a scenario where we ​have to fight inflation that turns out to be more persistent," ⁠Daly said at a Banco de España conference in Santander, Spain, noting that ​the drop in oil prices since the Iran war ceasefire is good news for ​the economy and the consumer.

"There's also a scenario where the growth just doesn't continue to sustain itself ... or the investment slows because people are worried they haven't seen the gains yet."

Daly ​spoke as the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics released data showing U.S. job ​growth slowed sharply last month. Traders reacted by exiting bets on a Fed rate hike later ‌this ⁠month and reducing bets on a rate hike in September.

Daly had just participated in a global central banking conference in Sintra, Portugal where Fed Chairman Kevin Warsh promised he would "disappoint" anyone who expected the U.S. central bank to fail to contain ​inflation, now in its ​sixth year of ⁠running above the Fed's 2% target.

At the same time he emphasized the huge impact AI is already having on the ​economy, in the near term pushing up on demand but ​at some ⁠point also driving up supply, forces that act in opposite ways on inflation.

Daly said the uncertainty around AI's impact on the economy holds her back from rushing on ⁠an interest ​rate decision.

"You don't want to react quickly when ​the world is changing quickly," she said Thursday. "You want to assess before you jump or act because ​you'll make better decisions."

Reporting by Ann Saphir, Editing by Louise Heavens and Chizu Nomiyama

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