No Conviction

In what is supposed to be Jerome Powell’s next to last meeting as chairman, there was plenty for the FOMC to discuss, but little action taken. As expected, there was no rate cut at today’s meeting, but changes to economic projections and comments at the press conference gave some light into how the Fed is processing political and geopolitical events, and how those events are shaping the Fed’s outlook.

The only notable change in the Statement from January was the addition of a new sentence stating the “implications of developments in the Middle East for the U.S. economy are uncertain.” Notably Fed Governor Miran once again voted against today’s decision to keep rates unchanged, preferring a 0.25% rate cut. Governor Waller, who also dissented in favor of a cut back in January, voted with the remaining FOMC members to keep rates unchanged.

Moving to the Summary of Economic Projections (the “dot plots”) shows inflation concerns rising, but anticipated to be short-lived. The Fed’s preferred PCE inflation measure is now forecast to rise 2.7% in 2026, versus a 2.4% forecast back in December. But inflation is still expected to move toward the longer-run 2.0% inflation target by the end of 2027. At the same time, the Fed slightly upgraded the outlook for GDP for 2026 (to 2.4% from 2.3%) as well as for each of the next two years. The unemployment rate forecast for 2026 remained unchanged.