The June FOMC

 | Jun 25, 2019 07:19AM ET

In the commentary leading up to the June meeting, I argued that some relaxation of the tariff issues with Mexico, combined with relatively good data for the US economy, would make the FOMC’s decision to hold pat on rates relatively easier.

While the FOMC did decide at its June meeting to hold rates constant for the moment, the dot charts and dissent by President Bullard suggest that a number of participants were closer to cutting rates than they may have been previously or than observers might have expected leading up to the meeting. The statement itself, as many have noted, deleted the word , and the FOMC also dropped its characterization of ongoing economic activity from “solid” to rising at a “moderate rate.” We need to remember that the minutes of the March meeting indicated that the staff forecast had included a markdown of growth after Q1, so the change in language validates that forecast and aligns with the districts’ characterization of growth in their regions.

The deletion of the word patience really reflects two considerations. First, the Committee expressed concerns that downside risks had increased, and Chairman Powell made it clear in the press conference that those concerns were driven by uncertainty about US tariff policies and global growth. The FOMC statement did note that inflation expectations for the near term had declined, but longer-term expectations remain well anchored. Clearly, the failure to achieve its inflation objectives was not a determining factor in the FOMC’s decision to maintain current rates.

Second, while the word patience was missing, it was also the case that policy would be dependent on incoming data, and that view hadn’t changed one bit. Instead, the deletion of patience indicated the FOMC’s concern about the risks to the expansion and reflected the Committee’s shift from a “steady as you go” policy stance to “on your mark.”

How far are we from “get set, go!” is now the critical question; and at this point, as former Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia President Charles Plosser noted on Bloomberg Asia after the meeting, we are rather in the dark as to what the FOMC’s reaction is likely to be to the incoming data. The key incoming data for the FOMC’s July 29–30 meeting will the June jobs report on July 5 and the first look at the advance estimate for Q2 2019 GDP on July 26.

We can also glean some useful information on how the FOMC participants’ views on policy have changed from a comparison of the dot plots from March to June.