Fed's Hammack says rates likely on hold 'for quite some time' - WOSU radio

Kitco Media
By Reuters
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Reuters
Fed's Hammack says rates likely on hold 'for quite some time' - WOSU radio teaser image

May 7 (Reuters) - Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland President Beth Hammack said in a radio interview on ​Thursday she expects the central bank to hold interest rates steady well ‌into the future as it navigates a climate of considerable uncertainty.

“My outlook right now is that interest rates will be on hold for quite some time,” with the amount of time on ​hold not yet clear, Hammack said in an interview on the WOSU ​public radio station.

“Based on what I see right now, I see ⁠a lot of uncertainty in the economic outlook” and “I think our statement should have ​a pretty neutral stance about whether the next move is down or up or ​just on hold for a really long period of time,” she said.

Hammack dissented at the most recent Fed meeting about the ongoing inclusion of language in its statement implying the Fed's next move would ​be a rate cut. The Fed held its interest rate target steady at ​between 3.5% and 3.75% and suggested that when it does change rates, the move will be to ‌lower ⁠them.

A number of Fed officials joined with Hammack to take issue with that stance, leading to the largest number of dissenters at a Fed meeting since 1992.

Hammack noted in the radio interview that she supported holding rates steady then and downplayed the ​level of discord implied ​by the vote, ⁠saying there was more consensus over economic and policy views than it appears.

Hammack said the job market is relatively stable at ​the moment in a low-hire, low-fire equilibrium, but when it comes ​to inflation, "we ⁠have been missing our 2% objective for the past five years, and with the pressures that we see right now coming from the conflict in Iran, it could mean ⁠that ​those pricing pressures are going to be more persistent."

Hammack ​also said in the interview that inflation expectations are largely anchored and that the banking system is ​doing well right now.
Reporting by Michael S. Derby; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Andrea Ricci

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