"Monetary policy needs to be tightened further. How much further will depend on incoming data on inflation, the real economy, and the extent of tightening credit conditions," Waller said in remarks prepared for delivery at the Graybar National Training Conference in San Antonio, Texas.
BANKING SYSTEM STABLE
Since the failure of Silicon Valley Bank on March 10, the Fed has been studying financial and credit markets to see if contagion was taking hold.
So far, Waller said it appeared that emergency steps taken
since then "appear to have been successful in providing
stability to the banking system," a conclusion that appears
broadly shared by U.S. central bankers.
That has left the Fed free to set monetary policy based on
the behavior of the economy and inflation, with a further
quarter percentage point increase in the target federal funds
rate expected at the upcoming May 2-3 meeting. That would lift
the fed funds rate to a range of 5.00% to 5.25%.
So far, Waller said, he sees both the economy and inflation
remaining stronger than he expected.
"Economic output and employment are continuing to grow at a
solid pace while inflation remains much too high," Waller said,
noting that investors should not expect rates to fall any time
soon.
"Monetary policy will need to remain tight for a substantial
period of time, and longer than markets anticipate," he said.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider;
Editing by Dan Burns)