There has been a growing chorus of Fed members who are inclined to hold rates steady at their next meeting on November 1, given the progress made toward taming inflation and tightening conditions. This includes New York Fed President John Williams, Vice Chair Michael Barr, Fed Governors Phillip Jefferson and Christopher Waller, Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic, San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly, Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan and Philadelphia Fed President Patrick Harker. Remember, the Fed has been hiking its benchmark Fed Funds Rate (which is the overnight borrowing rate for banks) to try to slow the economy and curb inflation. Their latest hike in July was the eleventh since March of last year, pushing the Fed Funds Rate to the highest level in 22 years. The Fed did not hike at their September meeting, so they could continue to assess incoming inflation, labor sector and other economic data.
What’s the bottom line? Last week, Fed Chair Jerome Powell stressed that the Fed is “proceeding carefully” as they walk the line between doing too much and doing too little to get inflation back down to their 2% target. However, he made it clear that additional rate hikes could still be ahead if strong economic data undermines the progress made on inflation.