Charts
DataOn-chain
VIP
Market Cap
API
Rankings
CoinOSNew
CoinClaw🦞
Language
  • 简体中文
  • 繁体中文
  • English
Leader in global market data applications, committed to providing valuable information more efficiently.

Features

  • Real-time Data
  • Special Features
  • AI Grid

Services

  • News
  • Open Data(API)
  • Institutional Services

Downloads

  • Desktop
  • Android
  • iOS

Contact Us

  • Chat Room
  • Business Email
  • Official Email
  • Official Verification

Join Community

  • Telegram
  • Twitter
  • Discord

© Copyright 2013-2026. All rights reserved.

简体繁體English
|Legacy

Federal Reserve Mouthpiece: Intense Internal Struggle, Can the Language Favoring Rate Cuts Be Maintained?

CN
Techub News
Follow
1 hour ago
AI summarizes in 5 seconds.

Written by: Wu Yu, Jin Ten Data

The Federal Reserve's two-day meeting will conclude at midnight on Thursday Beijing time, marking the last meeting led by Powell before he steps down as chairman. The market generally expects the Fed to maintain its position, the question is whether policymakers will suggest that the plan for interest rate cuts has derailed or just been delayed?

Nick Timiraos, a journalist for The Wall Street Journal, known as the "mouthpiece of the Fed," pointed out that currently, the energy shocks triggered by the Iranian war combined with multiple supply disturbances have led to a renewed risk of stagflation. The Fed is likely to keep the benchmark interest rate unchanged at 3.5% to 3.75%, with intense internal debates over adjustments to policy wording and the path for rate cuts.

Timiraos recalled that two years ago, when the U.S. economy was growing steadily and inflation was retreating, Powell humorously responded to stagflation concerns, stating flatly: "In fact, I see neither 'stag' nor 'flation'."

At that time, stagflation was merely a theoretical risk, and policy adjustments still had room to maneuver. But now, the energy shock from the Iranian war has brought this risk back to the forefront—the U.S. inflation has not returned to the Fed's 2% target for the past five years, and the shadows of 1970s stagflation are no longer distant.

Currently, the U.S. is experiencing its fourth supply shock in five years, including: the reopening of the economy post-pandemic, the Russia-Ukraine conflict, the "tariff war," and the ongoing war in the Middle East.

Timiraos noted that although each of the above shocks can be seen as "one-off events" that do not require an excessive policy response, the cumulative effect has made Fed officials highly alert. Especially Trump's tariff policies have begun to test businesses' and consumers' willingness to bear high prices.

Expectations for rate cuts within the Fed have weakened

Timiraos pointed out that Fed officials are struggling with whether weak job growth has exaggerated the fragility of the labor market—if economic employment absorption capacity declines due to slowed immigration, the current level of job growth may be sufficient.

Waller, a Fed governor who previously supported three rate cuts last year due to concerns about the labor market, has shifted this month to a heightened alert about inflation risks. Reflecting on the history of the 1970s, he warned: "We must be cautious about this series of one-off shocks; expectations are important, and at some point we may have to respond."

Although the Iranian war has reached a ceasefire, the Strait of Hormuz remains effectively blockaded, and aviation fuel prices have surged. Fed officials expect that it will take at least a year for inflation to return to the 2% target. Waller bluntly stated, "We have always said we want to keep inflation at 2%, yet five years have passed, and we have never achieved it. When will people start to question our commitment?"

Previously, some officials had discussed restarting rate cuts this year to counter the automatic tightening effect of "declining inflation and unchanged rates," but this idea has now been shelved. New York Fed President Williams stated to reporters on April 16, "Currently, we are not in such a situation; on the contrary, inflation is rising."

However, Timiraos also stated that the U.S. economy has changed compared to the 1970s, and the likelihood of a complete repeat of stagflation is low, and the Fed's current focus on inflation expectations far exceeds that of the past. Just as Williams defined the Fed's current policy stance as "a considered choice, rather than a passive response," he clearly stated, "Our monetary policy is in the right place, and this is the state we want."

Will there be changes to the Fed's policy statement?

Timiraos stated that currently, the bigger issue facing the Fed committee is whether they should modify the formal statement to imply that rate cuts are no longer on the table—historically, changes in policy wording have been at least as important as rate decisions.

Since the end of last year, the statement has retained the wording that "the next policy action is more likely to be a rate cut rather than a rate hike," and in the last two meetings, a few officials have wanted to remove this wording, signaling an equal possibility for both rate cuts and hikes.

These officials believe that inflation is moving in the wrong direction, shocks are accumulating, and the difficulty of returning to 2% inflation is increasing; meanwhile, the labor market remains strong, and the stock market has rebounded to historical highs, which contradicts the reasons some officials support rate cuts.

However, Timiraos also pointed out that the mainstream view of the committee believes that such an adjustment is too radical—changing the wording formally would itself tighten financial conditions, which is a hawkish move that officials are not yet prepared for. As a key ally of Powell, Williams stated, "We do not need to provide a strong forward guidance, and we are indeed not doing so at the moment."

Timiraos noted that officials will discuss this issue again later this week. Notably, the committee's thoughts sometimes move faster than their wording adjustments, and before formally modifying the policy statement, officials may convey the policy direction through more subtle means—such as Powell's press conference, speeches by officials in May, or the forecasts released at the next meeting in mid-June.

However, by then, the committee is likely to be led by Waller, a former Fed governor nominated by Trump to succeed Powell, and the decision on whether and how to formally adjust the Fed's policy guidance may fall to Waller, with his views on this issue potentially differing.

免责声明:本文章仅代表作者个人观点,不代表本平台的立场和观点。本文章仅供信息分享,不构成对任何人的任何投资建议。用户与作者之间的任何争议,与本平台无关。如网页中刊载的文章或图片涉及侵权,请提供相关的权利证明和身份证明发送邮件到support@aicoin.com,本平台相关工作人员将会进行核查。

|
|
APP
Windows
Mac
Share To

X

Telegram

Facebook

Reddit

CopyLink

|
|
APP
Windows
Mac
Share To

X

Telegram

Facebook

Reddit

CopyLink

Selected Articles by Techub News

59 minutes ago
How to identify whether a cryptocurrency project has the risk of a scam.
1 hour ago
Arkstream Capital: How Ordinary People Can Properly Participate in Tokenized Pre-IPO
19 hours ago
Starting from the Hong Kong trust license: How to build a global trust structure for high-net-worth clients in Asia?
View More

Table of Contents

|
|
APP
Windows
Mac
Share To

X

Telegram

Facebook

Reddit

CopyLink

Related Articles

avatar
avatarOdaily星球日报
20 minutes ago
What are the implications of the UAE's withdrawal from OPEC?
avatar
avatarTechub News
59 minutes ago
How to identify whether a cryptocurrency project has the risk of a scam.
avatar
avatarTechub News
1 hour ago
Arkstream Capital: How Ordinary People Can Properly Participate in Tokenized Pre-IPO
avatar
avatarOdaily星球日报
1 hour ago
Trump's son's Bitcoin game: personal profit of 100 million dollars, retail investors suffered losses of 500 million.
APP
Windows
Mac

X

Telegram

Facebook

Reddit

CopyLink