Hamburger Anzeiger - Fed minutes highlight divisions over rate cut decision

NYSE - LSE
CMSD -0.45% 24.47 $
CMSC -0.28% 24.66 $
AZN -0.68% 65.95 $
RIO -1.66% 61.952 $
BCE -1.3% 26.673 $
BCC -3.04% 148 $
GSK -0.68% 33.92 $
SCS -1.33% 13.54 $
NGG -1.21% 62.505 $
RYCEF 0.44% 6.8 $
RBGPF 1.33% 61 $
JRI -0.83% 13.26 $
BTI 0.49% 37.513 $
RELX 0.48% 46.795 $
VOD -0.34% 8.88 $
BP -1.58% 28.865 $
Fed minutes highlight divisions over rate cut decision
Fed minutes highlight divisions over rate cut decision / Photo: Mandel NGAN - AFP

Fed minutes highlight divisions over rate cut decision

The US Federal Reserve's rate-setting committee was divided during interest rate deliberations last month, although most members ultimately voted for a half percentage-point cut, according to minutes of the meeting published Wednesday.

Text size:

Policymakers voted 11-to-1 in favor of the larger cut to boost demand and bolster the labor market amid signs inflation was falling toward the bank's long-term two percent target, with Fed governor Michelle Bowman the only voting member of the committee to publicly back a smaller cut.

But behind the scenes, the full committee -- which includes seven non-voting members -- was more reluctant to back a 50 basis point cut during the deliberations than the initial decision published on September 18 suggested, according to minutes of the meeting.

While a "substantial majority" ultimately supported the 50 basis point cut, some participants "noted that there had been a plausible case for a 25 basis point rate cut at the previous meeting," according to the Fed minutes.

But despite not cutting over the summer, "some participants observed that they would have preferred a 25 basis point reduction of the target range at this meeting, and a few others indicated that they could have supported such a decision," the Fed said.

One concern raised in the discussions was that a larger cut could be read as a signal the Fed was looking to make a series of bigger rate reductions going forward, when no such decision had been taken.

"Several participants noted that a 25 basis point reduction would be in line with a gradual path of policy normalization that would allow policymakers time to assess the degree of policy restrictiveness as the economy evolved," the Fed said.

"A few participants also added that a 25 basis point move could signal a more predictable path of policy normalization," it added.

But in the end, almost all voting members of the committee coalesced around a larger cut, bringing the Fed's benchmark lending rate to between 4.75 and 5.00 percent.

Futures traders now see a roughly 80 percent chance that the Fed will move ahead with a 25 basis point cut at its next meeting in early November, according to CME Group data.

H.Eggers--HHA