WASHINGTON: Catching many investors off guard, the United States Federal Reserve has made clear that an interest rate hike next month is likely if the economy keeps improving.
The minutes of their most recent meeting in late April showed that Fed officials widely felt it would be time to raise rates at their June 14-15 meeting as long as hiring and economic growth strengthened and inflation showed signs of accelerating toward the Fed’s 2 percent target rate.
The Fed had voted 9-1 in April to keep rates unchanged while noting that threats from the global slowdown had eased.
Ernie Cecilia, chief investment officer of Bryn Mawr Trust, said that many investors didn’t think the Fed was inclined to raise rates in June and were surprised by Wednesday’s release.
The minutes said some Fed officials expressed concerns at the April meeting that the economic data might not be clear enough by mid-June to determine whether a rate hike was warranted. But that view was balanced against the belief of other officials that the data would be strong enough to justify a June hike.
Even at the April meeting, Fed officials were encouraged by developments in the economy and financial markets, the minutes showed. Several participants suggested that the risks to the economic outlook were now “roughly balanced.”
The Fed had last signaled its belief that risks were balanced in December when it hiked rates for the first time in nearly a decade, raising them from record lows near zero. But after turbulence struck financial markets and the global economy weakened, the Fed removed that assessment from its descriptions of the economy and held rates steady.
Until now, many economists have assumed that the Fed would leave rates alone at its June meeting. Some noted that the Fed will meet just a week before Britain votes on whether to leave the European Union — a possibility dubbed Brexit — and that the central bank might want to avoid destabilizing markets with a rate hike.
“June is very much alive, but Brexit remains a big hurdle,” said Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics.
Sal Guatieri, senior economist at BMO Capital Markets, agreed that the British vote could prompt the Fed to delay until the following month.
“A super-cautious (Fed Chair Janet) Yellen might well wait for more convincing evidence of a sustained pickup in the economy and a resolution of Brexit risks before pulling the trigger in July,” said Guatieri.
Some analysts suggested that the Fed might want to “pull the trigger” in June given evidence that the economy is recovering after nearly stalling in the first three months.
Also, inflation, which has been running below the Fed’s target level for four years, has shown signs of picking up as energy prices rebound from a drop at the start of the year. The government said this week the Consumer Price Index jumped 0.4 percent in April, reflecting higher energy costs.
Sara Johnson, an economist at Global Insight, said that by the time of the June meeting, the Fed will have seen several key reports, including job growth in May, consumer spending for April and a revised estimate of first-quarter economic growth.