The Fed stunned no one this week, as it made its fifth consecutive decision to leave its benchmark interest rate unchanged in a range of 5.25% to 5.5%. And though together the central bankers said they still expect to cut interest rates three times this year, more of them now say there could be fewer trims, depending on how things unfold. The Fed also raised its forecasts for core inflation slightly this year, but in a more encouraging sign, it also raised its forecast for economic growth. As for next year, Fed members estimate that the central bank will lower interest rates three times – down from the four cuts they predicted just three months ago.
Consumer prices in the UK jumped by a surprisingly small 3.4% in February – the slimmest yearly lurch since 2021 and a heck of a lot kinder than January’s 4%. It was partly thanks to easing food prices, sure, but even core inflation (the measure that excludes food and energy) climbed by less than expected. The upbeat news prompted traders to increase their bets that the BoE will start cutting its key interest rate this summer.
In the meantime, the BoE announced – unsurprisingly – that it held that rate steady for a fifth straight time last week, at a 16-year high of 5.25%. And it was a near-unanimous decision, with the two central bankers who’d been calling for even higher rates coming around and voting with the majority. The Bank struck an optimistic tone, saying that inflation appears to be falling toward its 2% target, prompting traders to further increase their bets for summer rate cuts. That sent the pound and UK bond yields lower.
The BoJ, on the other hand, continued to dance to its own beat last week, announcing its first rate hike since 2007. With that, the central bank said sayonara to the world’s last-remaining negative interest rate and a whole bunch of other unconventional tools designed to encourage spending over saving. The BoJ’s been locked in a decades-long tussle with economy-defeating deflation, but it’s got new confidence that its 2% inflation target is finally within sight. And that’s because of a recent run of consumer price rises and a strong new wage deal agreed to by Japan’s biggest companies, which the Bank believes could keep inflation going.
Growth in Chinese factory output and fixed-asset investment both took off at the start of the year, new data found, a reassuring sign for the world’s second-biggest economy. Investors have been closely watching China’s economic reports for signs of improvement after a period of falling prices, fading consumer confidence, and slumping property values. The data provided little cause for optimism on that last point, however: it showed that the real estate sector remains a major drag on the economy.