Federal Reserve officials were divided earlier this month on whether to pause their interest rate hikes at their upcoming meeting in June, according to the minutes of their May 2-3 meeting released Wednesday.
âSeveral (policymakers) noted if the economy evolved along the lines of their current outlooks, then further policy firming after this meeting may not be necessaryâ â Fed parlance for a pause â the minutes said.
At the same time, âsomeâ officials said that the persistence of high inflation meant that âadditional (rate hikes) would likely be warranted at future meetings.â
Yet in the language used in the minutes, âseveralâ is considered to be more than âsome,â suggesting that those favoring a pause may have the upper hand.
In addition, Chair Jerome Powell and the officials closest to him have signaled in speeches over the past week that theyâre likely to support a pause in rate hikes at their next meeting in mid-June.
The Fed raises its key rate to lift the cost of mortgages, auto loans, credit card borrowing and business loans.
By making borrowing more expensive, the Fed seeks to slow growth and inflation.
Fed officials have raised their benchmark rate for 10 straight meetings, to about 5.1%, a 16-year high.
Wednesdayâs minutes also underscored the unusually uncertain economy that Fed officials are assessing as they consider their next policy moves.
At their meeting this month, officials âgenerally expressed uncertainty about how much moreâ they should raise interest rates, the minutes said.
That divergence has pointed to a likely compromise: Instead of an indefinite pause to rate hikes, the officials may back a so-called âskip.â

Under this scenario, the Fed wouldnât raise rates at the June meeting but would signal that it remains open to future hikes if inflation stays too far above its 2% target in the coming months.
Though that possibility wasnât explicitly discussed at this monthâs meeting, the minutes said that âsomeâ officials wanted to make clear that any signal that the Fed would pause its hikes in June âshould not be interpreted as signaling either thatâ the central bank would cut rates soon âor that further increases in the target range had been ruled out.â
At a news conference after the Fed officials met on May 3, Powell said there had been a discussion about forgoing rate increases at future meetings, though he wouldnât say how many officials had favored doing so.
âThereâs a sense,â Powell said then, âthat weâre much closer to the end of this than to the beginning. We feel like weâre getting close or, maybe even there.â
Also Wednesday, Christopher Waller, a member of the Fedâs Board of Governors, suggested that inflation remains too high and hasnât made much progress toward the Fedâs 2% target.
As a result, Waller indicated, itâs too soon to say what the Fed should do at its next meeting in mid-June.
Itâs not yet clear, he said, if the Fedâs key rate is high enough to slow borrowing, spending and inflation.
âI do not support stopping rate hikes unless we get clear evidence that inflation is moving down towards our 2 percent objective,â Waller added. âBut whether we should hike or skip at the June meeting will depend on how the data come in over the next three weeks.â
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