Taking a breather: Fed holds interest rates steady in patient battle against inflation
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The Federal Reserve left interest rates unchanged Wednesday, but reaffirmed its commitment to battling stubborn inflation.
After raising interest rates at the last ten meetings in a row, Fed policymakers opted to hold their benchmark rate steady, between 5 and 5.25 percent. They signaled that additional rate hikes are possible, if necessary to bring prices under control.
“The Committee is strongly committed to returning inflation to its 2 percent objective,” members of the Fed's rate-setting body said in a statement.
The central bank's decision to forego an eleventh consecutive rate hike comes a day after the Labor Department reported mixed progress on restoring price stability. Consumer prices in May were up 4 percent from a year ago — the smallest annual increase since March 2021.
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But much of the drop in inflation last month resulted from falling gasoline prices, which are notoriously erratic. Excluding volatile prices for energy and food, inflation is still running at 5.3 percent — more than two-and-a-half times the Fed’s 2 percent target.
“Things are still moving in the right direction and encouraging,” says Kathy Bostjancic, chief economist at Nationwide. “But when we look at what we call the ‘core’ consumer price index, there is where you still see some stickiness.”
After initially underestimating the staying power of pandemic price spikes, the Fed has moved aggressively to combat inflation, raising interest rates by five percentage points in the last 15 months. Bostjancic believes Fed policymakers will be careful not to take their foot off the brake prematurely.
“The Fed is far from calling victory on the inflation front,” she says. “If need be, they'll raise rates again as soon as July.”
On average, Fed policymakers now think rates will need to climb about a half percentage point higher — to 5.6 percent — by the end of this year. In March, Fed officials expected the current rate would be high enough to bring inflation under control.
Borrowing costs have already risen at the fastest pace in decades. The average rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage is 6.71 percent, according to Freddie Mac. The average interest rate on credit cards now tops 20 percent.
That’s expensive for the nearly half of credit card users who carry a balance. Credit card balances have ballooned as borrowers struggle to keep pace with rising prices.
“For millions of Americans, the paycheck just doesn't go as far as the household expenses are now going, due to inflation,” says Greg McBride, chief financial analyst at Bankrate. “Budgets are stretched. And we've seen that with savings coming down and with credit card debt going up.”
On the flip side, people who are lucky enough to have savings in the bank can finally earn interest rates that outpace inflation.
“Savers are seeing the best returns that they've seen in 15 years, provided that they’re looking in the right place,” McBride says.
He cautions that it pays to shop around. Internet banks, small community banks and credit unions often have the most competitive interest rates.
“A lot of banks are still dragging their feet and have been pretty stingy in their payouts for savings accounts and CDs,” McBride says. “But the top yielding accounts are over 5 percent. And that's where you need to have your money.”
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