Fed Conundrum: Are Rates Restrictive?

Markets had already begun revising their views on the path of interest rates ahead of last week’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting, but those revisions gained momentum following the decision, the updated dot plot, and – perhaps most importantly –the lack of clarity around what Federal Reserve (Fed) officials are thinking going forward. This absence of communication reflects a deliberate shift: New Fed Chair Kevin Warsh has effectively stepped away from forward guidance at the outset of his tenure.

From our experience participating in Fed meetings, we know that the dot plot has never been universally embraced within the institution. The concern was not that it lacked informational value, but rather that markets interpreted it as a forecast, which was never its intended purpose. Forward guidance is meant to shape expectations and influence behavior, not to serve as a firm prediction of future policy decisions.

Chair Warsh did not eliminate the dot plot at his first FOMC meeting, although notably he did not contribute to it. That omission has already fueled speculation that the tool may eventually be phased out. Given that the dot plot has served as one of the Fed’s primary mechanisms for forward guidance, its long-term survival appears uncertain. Removing it outright at the first meeting may have been a step too far, but its role as a legacy communication tool from an earlier policy framework is increasingly evident. The same could ultimately be said for the Summary of Economic Projections (SEP), which also functions as a forward guidance mechanism. Once the ongoing review of the inflation framework is complete, the SEP could face similar scrutiny.

Turning to rates, as recently as April the Powell-led Fed maintained that policy was still restrictive, implying no immediate need for further tightening to bring inflation down. The Warsh Fed; however, appears to hold a different view. Chair Warsh has suggested that rates are restrictive only in the housing sector. If that is indeed the case, it strengthens the argument for additional rate increases, a view seemingly reflected in the latest dot plot. Yet the Fed chose not to act at this meeting.

mortgage rates remain elevated

This is precisely where forward guidance would have been most valuable. Greater transparency around the decision – how the vote broke down, the rationale behind holding steady, and the conditions that might trigger action – would have helped anchor market expectations. In its absence, markets are left to speculate.

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