
Stocks are flattish this morning as tensions rise with Iran. Bonds and MBS are down.
The minutes of the January FOMC meeting were released yesterday, and they showed the Committee was generally comfortable with the current status of monetary policy. They noted the general push-pull in inflation between goods and services and view the recent softening of the labor market as over. They believe that inflation will continue to work its way towards the 2% objective and the labor market will gradually improve.
On inflation:
Regarding the outlook for inflation, participants anticipated that inflation would move down toward the Committee’s 2 percent objective, though the pace and timing of this decline remained uncertain. Participants generally expected that the effects of tariffs on core goods prices would likely start to diminish this year. Several participants remarked that the ongoing moderation in inflation for housing services was likely to continue to exert downward pressure on overall inflation. Several participants also expected higher productivity growth associated with technological or regulatory developments to put downward pressure on inflation.
On the labor market:
With regard to the labor market, participants observed that the unemployment rate had held steady, on net, in recent months, while job gains had remained low. Most participants noted that recent data readings such as those for the unemployment rate, layoffs, and job openings suggested that labor market conditions may be stabilizing after a period of gradual cooling. Almost all participants observed that while the level of layoffs remained low, hiring remained low as well. Consistent with that observation, several participants noted that their business contacts continued to express caution in hiring decisions, reflecting uncertainty about the economic outlook and the effect of AI and other automation technologies on the labor market.
It is important to note that perceptions and reality of inflation differ. Take for example housing services inflation. Housing services inflation indicators like owners equivalent rent are huge components of the inflation indices, but consumers (and voters) notice the level of prices, not the rate of change of prices. So while average asking rents have been declining for years, telling consumers that doesn’t erase the fact that they are expensive and that is what consumers feel.
The Fed is correct that tariff-driven inflation is probably over. We are coming up on the anniversary of Liberation Day and once that happens, all of the year-over-year comparisons of pre and post tariffs disappear. Not only that we have had enough time for corporations to make adjustments to lower-priced internal sources. That will again help the inflation numbers, but it probably won’t do much for consumer sentiment.
The FOMC considers the current Fed Funds rate to be in the upper range of neutral policy, which means they think they are close to r-star. That is probably correct, however r-star is thought to be in the 3% to 3.5% area. Bottom line is the Fed Funds futures are probably about right, and we see two more cuts this year.
The military buildup in the Middle East is starting to affect the data as well. Oil prices are spiking in anticipation of military action with Iran. That said, it sounds like Trump is looking for a deal, not a war, with Katherine Leavitt saying “Iran would be very wise to make a deal.” By now, the world should be used to Trump’s initial negotiating bluster followed by concessions to get a deal.
Industrial production rose 0.7% MOM in January according to the Federal Reserve. This was well above the 0.4% estimate. Manufacturing production rose 0.6%, again above the 0.2% estimate. Capacity utilization declined to 76.2%.
Initial jobless claims declined to 206k last week.


















