The US Federal Reserve is widely expected to keep interest rates unchanged at its policy meeting this week, treading carefully amid uncertainty over President Donald Trump’s economic policies, which include spending cuts and sweeping tariffs.
Since January, Trump has imposed levies on major trading partners Canada, Mexico and China, and on steel and aluminium imports, roiling financial markets and fanning fears that his plans could tip the world’s biggest economy into a recession.
The Trump administration has also embarked on unprecedented cost-cutting efforts that target staff and spending, while the president has promised tax reductions and deregulation down the road.
But Fed Chair Jerome Powell emphasized this month that it is the “net effect” of policy changes that will matter for both the economy and monetary policy.
Analysts widely expect the central bank to hold the benchmark lending rate steady at 4.25 per cent to 4.50 per cent, after similarly doing so in January.
“Recent Fed commentary has reinforced a wait-and-see approach, with officials signaling little urgency to adjust policy as they assess the economic impact of recent policy shifts,” said EY chief economist Gregory Daco.
Powell himself has said that policymakers are focused on separating signal from noise as the outlook evolves.
“We do not need to be in a hurry, and we are well positioned to wait for greater clarity,” the Fed chief added in a recent speech in New York.
Economist Michael Pearce at Oxford Economics said he expects the Fed will not want to “overreact” to early signs that inflation may pick up, or to indications that the economy is weakening more quickly than anticipated.
The Fed has previously kept rates elevated to tamp down inflation. Cutting rates, conversely, typically stimulates economic activity, providing a boost to growth.
“It’s a bit of a dilemma for the Fed,” Pearce said, as there could be conflicting signals.
ING analysts expect the Fed to signal its base case remains two 25 basis point cuts this year, noting “there is no pressing need for additional rate cuts given that unemployment is low and inflation is still tracking hot.” In February, government data showed that the unemployment rate was a relatively low 4.1 per cent, with the labour market remaining stable.
The consumer price index − a gauge of inflation − came in at 2.8 per cent for February as well, cooler than expected but still some distance from officials’ two per cent target. This boosts expectations that the Fed would proceed cautiously as it seeks to lower inflation sustainably.
Inflation is “likely to remain above target through the rest of the year given the impetus from tariffs,” ING analysts expect.
They warned in a recent note that the use of levies could “escalate significantly” as Trump seeks to bring manufacturing back to US shores, potentially triggering price hikes.
‘Volatility’ - Pearce of Oxford Economics expects that the economy is strong enough to weather a downturn from tariffs − meaning the Fed will unlikely be forced to respond to weakening conditions.
But there remains a risk that more weakness comes through, he said, and that the Fed “will react to a growth scare and loosen policy sooner.” Daco of EY said Powell “will have to tap dance around policy uncertainty and its cousin market volatility” in a press conference after the Fed’s rate decision is announced Wednesday.
Private sector activity is slowing as policy uncertainty remains elevated, while stocks have pulled back notably, he said.
GDP growth is also likely to stall in the first quarter in part due to weaker consumer spending.
“Powell may find it difficult to reaffirm that the economy is ‘holding up just fine,’ and that it ‘doesn’t need us to do anything,’” Daco added in a note.
Looking ahead, he warned that the Fed’s policy stance could shift rapidly with economic conditions.
“A reactionary monetary policy stance means policy direction could rapidly turn more dovish on weaker economic and labour market data, just like it could turn hawkish with hotter inflation readings,” he said.
The US Economic Policy Uncertainty Index, which analyzes newspaper articles with keywords related to economic and policy uncertainty, along with tax code changes and other economic data, recently jumped to its highest since July 2024.
Higher policy uncertainty bodes ill not just for the stock market, but also for business investments and for consumer spending. On Monday, Delta Air Lines, slashed its first-quarter profit estimates by half, and its CEO said the environment had weakened due to US economic uncertainty.
Individual investor pessimism over the short-term outlook for US stocks is at a more than two-year high in the latest American Association of Individual Investors (AAII) Sentiment Survey.
The change in sentiment has been accompanied by institutional investors slashing equity allocations. Investors’ equity positioning dipped to slightly underweight for the first time since briefly hitting that level in August, Deutsche Bank analysts said in a note on Friday.
Meanwhile, the Cboe Volatility Index, an options based measure of investor demand for protection against market declines has jumped to a 7-month high of 29.57, compared with its long-term median reading of 17.6.
Agencies