The Federal Reserve reduced interest rates for the first time since the financial crisis and hinted it may cut again this year to insulate the record-long U.S. economic expansion from slowing global growth.
Central bankers voted, with two officials dissenting, to lower the target range for the benchmark rate by a quarter-percentage point to 2%-2.25%. The shift was predicted by most investors and economists, yet will disappoint President Trump, who tweeted on Tuesday he wanted a 鈥渓arge cut.鈥欌
鈥淚n light of the implications of global developments for the economic outlook as well as muted inflation pressures, the committee decided to lower鈥欌 rates, the Federal Open Market Committee, led by Jerome Powell, said in a statement following a two-day meeting in Washington. It also noted that 鈥渦ncertainties鈥 about the economic outlook remain.
Bloomberg News
Following the statement, the benchmark two-year yield rose to 1.84%, and the 10-year climbed to 2.03%. The dollar strengthened and stocks fell.
Officials also stopped shrinking the Fed鈥檚 balance sheet effective Aug. 1, ending a process that very modestly tightens monetary policy and was previously scheduled to come to a close at the end of September.
Policy makers appeared open to another cut as early as September when they next convene, while sticking with wording in their statement that preserves their options.
鈥淎s the committee contemplates the future path of the target range for the federal funds rate, it will continue to monitor the implications of incoming information for the economic outlook and will act as appropriate to sustain the expansion,鈥 they said.
Kansas City Fed President Esther George and Boston鈥檚 Eric Rosengren voted against the cut. The statement said they 鈥減referred at this meeting to maintain the target range for the federal funds rate.鈥 It was the first time since Powell took over as chairman in February 2018 that two policymakers dissented.
Investors had forecast the Fed to continue easing monetary policy this year, with futures pricing the key rate to fall about another half-point by January. U.S. stocks rose to a record last week in anticipation of easier money, while the yield on two-year Treasuries has undershot 2% since May.
While the domestic economy has performed relatively well, the Fed cut amid concern that softness abroad threatens the decade- long U.S. expansion. Trump鈥檚 trade war with China is hurting foreign demand. Data released earlier Wednesday showed the pace of quarter-over-quarter growth in the euro area slowed by half in the latest three months to 0.2%.
In the U.S., after growing 2.5% last year, fueled by now-fading tax cuts and higher government spending, the economy expanded at a 2.1% annualized pace in the second quarter. The trade dispute was blamed for a manufacturing slowdown and the first drop in business investment since 2016.
In their assessment of the U.S. economy, officials made only minor changes to their statement language.
Powell has repeatedly said the Fed鈥檚 鈥渙verarching goal鈥欌 is to keep growth going. Acting now, when the central bank has less room to pare rates than in past downturns, is partly aimed at getting ahead of any potential slump.
Lackluster inflation also offered the Fed space and reason to ease. Its preferred price gauge, excluding food and energy, rose 1.6% in June from a year earlier and hasn鈥檛 met the Fed鈥檚 2% target this year.
Trump is unlikely to be satisfied as he puts the economy at the heart of his re-election bid. He has broken with convention and undermined the Fed鈥檚 political independence by lobbying it to loosen policy and publicly questioning his nomination of Powell as chairman.
While Trump and some investors wanted the Fed to be more aggressive, its scope for doing so is limited. Stocks are high, unemployment is around the lowest in a half-century and consumers continue to spend. There鈥檚 also a chance lower rates will lead to asset bubbles and excessive borrowing that will haunt the economy later.
The rate reduction was the first since December 2008 when the Fed dropped its benchmark effectively to zero as it battled recession and financial crisis. It began raising borrowing costs in December 2015, doing so another eight times. Officials indicated as recently as December they intended to continue to hike this year.
They dumped that plan in January as financial markets fretted monetary policy had become too restrictive.