Kansas City Fed President Schmid (2025 FOMC voter, hawk)'s comments in a speech Tuesday ("The Federal Reserve and Outlook for the Economy and Monetary Policy" - link) hint that he wouldn't support a rate cut as soon as September's FOMC meeting, and could even dissent against such a decision. He sees policy as "not very restrictive" and close to neutral and appears to view the debate over tariff-driven inflation as something of a distraction - instead the Fed should "monitor demand growth" in order to keep inflation "on a path to 2%".
- In short, "with the economy still showing momentum, growing business optimism, and inflation still stuck above our objective, retaining a modestly restrictive monetary policy stance remains appropriate for the time being. Though of course this is a position that I will continually reassess as we receive new data and information on inflation, the labor market, and the economy more generally."
- He says that "My support for a patient approach to changing the policy rate is based on two connected arguments. First, while monetary policy might currently be restrictive, it is not very restrictive. And second, given recent price pressures, a modestly restrictive stance is exactly where we want to be."
- He says that the current policy stance is "not far from neutral": "we are as close to meeting our dual mandate objectives of price stability and full employment as we have been for quite some time. And while uncertainties abound, I do not see strong evidence of a trend movement away from our mandates at this point." He points to financial market variables: "looking at financial markets, with stock prices near record highs and bond spreads near record lows, I see little evidence of a highly restrictive monetary policy."
- On the labor market, he appears to shrug off the weakly-perceived July employment report: "While it is true that payroll growth was weak over the summer, a broader set of indicators suggest a labor market that is in balance. " On inflation: "On the other side of the mandate, inflation remains too high." And on growth: "Currently, the economy continues to show strong momentum...I am hearing increased optimism as some of the uncertainty and concern around trade policy that spiked in April recedes. Overall, my expectation is that the economy will show continued resilience."
- On tariffs, he says that he wouldn't "characterize my view on tariffs and inflation as 'wait-and-see'", in part because "I will confidently forecast that a decade from now economists will still be arguing over exactly what impact the tariffs had on inflation. As such, I see no possibility that we will know the effect of the tariffs on prices, either as a one-off shock to the price level or a persistent inflation impetus, over the next few months."
- As such he'll be "data dependent" - while "the Fed cannot offset the effect of higher tariffs on prices, [] what the Fed can do is monitor demand growth, provide space for the economy to adjust, and keep inflation on a path to 2 percent. Overall, I am anticipating a relatively muted effect of tariffs on inflation, but I view that as a sign that policy is appropriately calibrated rather than a sign that the policy rate should be cut."