
Stocks are lower as markets assess whether the ceasefire in the Persian Gulf will hold. Bonds and MBS are down.
The FOMC minutes were released yesterday. The situation in Iran was still fresh, so the expected effects were still pretty uncertain. The gist of the meeting is that they consider inflation to be the bigger threat and the labor market to be in good shape. The overall consensus was that monetary policy was close enough to neutral that they could wait and see how the economy develops.
On inflation:
Participants generally observed that overall inflation remained above the Committee’s 2 percent longer-run goal. Some participants remarked that further progress in reducing inflation had been absent in recent months. Participants anticipated that, under appropriate monetary policy, inflation would gradually move down toward the Committee’s 2 percent objective after the effect of increased tariffs and higher oil prices had faded. Participants also expected that higher oil prices would increase inflation in the near term and delay the anticipated decline in inflation toward the Committee’s 2 percent objective. Several participants remarked that the ongoing deceleration in housing services prices was likely to continue to exert downward pressure on overall inflation. Several participants also expected higher productivity growth, associated with technological or deregulatory developments, to put downward pressure on inflation. Participants noted that a prolonged conflict in the Middle East would likely lead to more persistent increases in energy prices and that these higher input costs would be more likely to pass through to core inflation.
On the labor market:
With regard to the labor market, participants observed that the unemployment rate had been little changed in recent months, while job gains had remained low. Most participants judged that the recent data readings, such as those for job openings, layoffs, hiring, and nominal wage growth, continued to suggest that the labor market was broadly in balance, with the low rate of job growth roughly in line with slower labor force growth. With respect to the outlook for the labor market, the majority of participants expected the unemployment rate to remain little changed and for net job creation and labor force growth to remain low, while a couple of participants expected labor market conditions to soften. The vast majority of participants judged that risks to the employment side of the mandate were skewed to the downside.
On monetary policy:
Against this backdrop, almost all participants supported maintaining the current target range for the federal funds rate at this meeting. With the policy rate having been lowered 75 basis points in the second half of last year, these participants generally viewed the policy rate as within a range of plausible estimates of its neutral level. They judged that leaving the policy rate unchanged kept the Committee well positioned to determine the extent and timing of additional adjustments to the policy rate based on the incoming data, the evolving outlook, and the balance of risks. Most participants commented that it was too early to know how developments in the Middle East would affect the U.S. economy and judged it prudent to continue to monitor the situation and assess the implications for the appropriate stance of monetary policy.
There are two important considerations to the inflation story. First, SCOTUS declared the Trump Tariffs unconstitutional, and the temporary extension expires in June. That inflationary support will wane. The second concerns transit through the Strait of Hormuz. The closure is pushing up prices in fertilizer, petrochemicals, plastics, etc. The longer this goes on, the more that higher energy prices will flow through to other goods and services.
Fourth quarter GDP was revised downward to 0.5% from 0.7%. Downward revisions in consumption and investment drove the decrease. The PCE Price Index was unchanged at 2.9% on the headline and 2.7% on the core rate.


















