The economic assessment is little changed with the labor market described as strong and economic activity as moderate and with household spending upgraded from "picking up" in the last two statements to "rising at a strong pace". But business spending is downgraded, from "soft" to having "weakened" with the word "exports" now inserted and also described as having weakened.
The range of these assessments in the debate isn't known but the conclusions drawn by the policy makers have a striking range, underscored by the FOMC forecasts. These show seven of the 17 total members expecting one more 1/4 point cut before year end, with five seeing no further cuts and 5 wanting a rate hike back above 2.0 percent. Economic forecasts are little changed with GDP marked up 1 tenth to 2.2 percent for this year and with the unemployment rate moved up 1 tenth to 3.7 percent. Year-end forecasts for core inflation are unchanged, at 1.8 percent this year (running at 1.6 percent in August) and 1.9 percent for the end of next year.
Jerome Powell has his hands full, trying to find consensus within the Federal Reserve at the same time being sharply pressured by President Trump for further rate cuts. Global concerns are underscored by the inclusion of the reference to exports where weakness or recovery will more and more be the central factor on the Fed's future assessments and rate actions. In a technical move to keep the rate on target, the Fed cut its IOER (interest on excess reserves) by 30 basis points to 1.80 percent and lowered the discount rate by 25 basis points to 2.50 percent.
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