Inflation Dampens Expectations

 | Sep 16, 2015 11:00AM ET

With the Federal Open Market Committee beginning day one of the two-day FOMC Meeting, expectations are high for a shift in strategy from the most prominent global central bank. After a decade of rate cuts and low interest-rate policies, the Federal Reserve is expected to signal a pivot in monetary policy just as volatility picks up in financial markets as growing emerging market concerns overshadow the gains in advanced economies. While invariably possible, it is still difficult to imagine the Federal Reserve voting members will use tomorrow’s decision as the launch pad for announcing the implementation of more hawkish interest-rate policies. Growing malaise abroad and the fact that inflation remains unanchored has made it difficult to persuade market participants of the need for higher interest rates despite the window for action shrinking as time passes. The reduced probability of a change in policy tomorrow comes as the latest consumer price index numbers show that inflation risks remain broadly to the downside amid renewed commodity deflation. Today’s CPI numbers showed that headline inflation slipped into deflationary territory for the first time since January, a worrying sign for policymakers despite CPI not being the most important relied-upon indicator by policymakers.