Waller says risks in US tilted towards high inflation

Kitco Media
By Reuters
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Reuters
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WASHINGTON, July 6 (Reuters) - U.S. Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller said on Monday that high inflation is the chief risk facing the Fed given ​a labor market that remains stable.

"A year ago I was advocating for ‌rate cuts because the labor market was not looking good, so I was willing to tolerate a longer movement back to our 2% (inflation) target based on the labor market," Waller said at an ​economics conference in Rome. "Those risks have completely flipped around now. The labor market ​seems to be stabilizing in the US. Inflation has been taking off. ⁠So then that changes how you might want to think about policy."

Waller did not ​explicitly mention a June jobs report that showed weaker-than-expected hiring but a drop in the ​unemployment rate to 4.2% versus 4.3% in May.

Yet his comments at an economics conference in Rome put added focus on inflation data scheduled to be released on July 14 on consumer prices through June, ​a key final data point before the Fed's July 28 to 29 meeting.

Global oil ​prices that have fallen back to around $70 a barrel, where they were before the start of a ‌U.S.-backed ⁠war with Iran, could help ease headline inflation. But Fed policymakers in projections issued after the June meeting still felt their preferred measure of inflation would be more than a percentage point above the central bank's 2% target at year end.

Investors currently expect rates ​to rise by the ​Fed's September meeting, ⁠with odds of a July rate hike at about one in four.

Whether it happens or not, with nine Fed officials projecting the ​need for tighter policy this year, "a rate hike is on the ​table" when ⁠policymakers gather for the July meeting, Tim Duy, chief U.S. economist for SGH Macro Advisors, wrote in a recent analysis. With relatively low unemployment and inflation stuck above target, "the Fed ⁠is missing ​on only one side of its mandate. This shouldn't ​be a debate anymore."

The Fed in a unanimous decision held rates steady at its June meeting, the first ​under new Chairman Kevin Warsh.

Reporting by Howard Schneider, Editing by Franklin Paul and Andrea Ricci

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