Awaiting Further Clarity

The Federal Reserve held rates steady today, while emphasizing that elevated uncertainty has clouded the path forward. If, when, and how much tariff policy will change in the months to come will play a large part in dictating the next move for the Fed. But until greater clarity arrives, the Fed is happy to watch and wait.

Starting with today’s FOMC statement, there were a few changes worthy of note. In the very first sentence, the Fed added text that “swings in net exports have affected the data,” which made sense given how the first quarter GDP declined, but all due to a temporary surge in imports. Additional changes to the text noted rising uncertainty in the economic outlook, with the Fed judging risks are higher for both unemployment and inflation – the two parts of the Fed’s mandate.

We admit this is an incredibly difficult time to forecast, with soft sentiment data moving in negative direction while some hard data on real activity continues to progress. The remnants of COVID-era spending measures are still echoing through the system, and how the economy will progress in the short term if true progress is made in cutting deficit spending and signing new trade deals is still to be seen. The era of easy everything is over, and while that may not be a welcome transition for many, it’s a necessary transition. Kudos to Chair Powell for stating during the press conference that US debt has been on an unsustainable path. But just how much discomfort the Fed is willing to endure during a period of transition is yet to be seen.