Chicago Fed’s Goolsbee ('27 voter, generally dovish but dissented hawkishly at Dec FOMC) spoke on CNBC in which he unsurprisingly reiterated his post-CPI comments from Friday that the January report had some encouraging bits but also some concerns, with still pretty high services inflation.
- He again warned that services inflation remains elevated but if price hikes linked to tariffs are a one-off, it could allow policymakers room to move.
- “I do think that if this proves to be transitory, and we can show that we’re on path back to 2% inflation, I still think there’s several more rate cuts that can happen in 2026, but we’ve got to see it”.
- Monetary policy may not be that restrictive if inflation is steady around 3%, he said. "If inflation runs persistently high, we're loosening -- we're being looser than we otherwise would. That's why I say I want some evidence we're headed back to 2% and then I think rates can keep coming down”.
- The January CPI report showed further disinflation in shelter prices, but services inflation is "not tame" and core came in at a 3.6% annualized M/M rate, he said. "So far I think we've been basically stalled out around 3% with some positive signs but also some warning signs," he said. "I want to get more information."
- Returning to Friday’s remarks, recall that he still thought it would have been wiser to wait rather than cut in December but had repeated that he still thinks interest rates can still go down a fair bit more.