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Fed leaves rates unchanged, sees two cuts in 2025 but less easing in later years
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Fed leaves rates unchanged, sees two cuts in 2025 but less easing in later years
Jun 18, 2025 11:31 AM

WASHINGTON -The Federal Reserve held interest rates steady on Wednesday and policymakers signaled borrowing costs are still likely to fall this year, but slowed the overall pace of expected future rate cuts in the face of estimated higher inflation flowing from the Trump administration's tariff plans.

In new economic projections, policymakers sketched a modestly stagflationary picture of the U.S. economy, with economic growth slowing to 1.4% this year, unemployment rising to 4.5% by the end of this year, and inflation finishing 2025 at 3%, well above the current level.

While policymakers still anticipate cutting rates by half a percentage point this year, as they projected in March and December, they slightly slowed the pace from there to a single quarter-percentage-point cut in each of 2026 and 2027 in a protracted fight to return inflation to the central bank's 2% target.

Under the new projections, inflation remains elevated at 2.4% through 2026 before falling to 2.1% in 2027 amid largely stable unemployment.

"Uncertainty about the economic outlook has diminished but remains elevated," the Fed said in its latest policy statement, a modification of language used in May, at a more turbulent moment in the trade debate, when it said that the risk of both higher inflation and higher unemployment had risen.

Those outcomes were embedded in the new projections, the Fed's latest thinking about how President Donald Trump's suite of economic policies is expected to shape the economy this year. 

The 1.4% growth in output this year compares to the 1.7% rate seen in the last round of projections in March, and the 4.5% unemployment rate expected at the end of the year is up from the 4.4% projected in March. The rate in May was 4.2%

So far, however, "the unemployment rate remains low, and labor market conditions remain solid," the Fed said in its policy statement, which was approved unanimously. 

It did not mention the sudden outbreak of hostilities between Israel and Iran and the risk that conflict posed to global oil or other markets.

U.S. stock indexes were little changed after the release of the policy statement and projections, while the 10-year Treasury yield remained slightly lower. Futures expectations for rate cuts later this year also did not move much and continued to view the Fed's September 16-17 meeting as the likely time when the central bank will cut rates.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell is due to speak to reporters to elaborate on the central bank's decision and projections.

"Barring any surprises at the presser, the June FOMC looks set to be a 'placeholder' meeting, where Powell & Co continue to sit on the sidelines, awaiting further clarity on how the economy evolves, and how the balance of risks to each side of the dual mandate is evolving," said Michael Brown, senior research strategist at Pepperstone, an investment firm.

IMPACT OF TARIFFS 

The rate projections from Fed officials for this year at least are in line with recent market expectations for a quarter-percentage-point rate reduction as soon as the September meeting. The central bank continues to ignore Trump's call for immediate rate cuts, a move Fed officials feel would be counter to their effort to ensure inflation returns to their 2% target until key tariff changes are finalized and their effects are better understood.

As Fed officials were meeting on Wednesday, Trump called Powell "stupid" and said the policy rate should be slashed in half, the type of move usually reserved for severe economic emergencies. The president also mused about installing himself as Fed chief. 

The Fed's current policy rate was set in the current 4.25%-4.50% range in December, and policymakers have been reluctant to commit to a timeline for further cuts given the volatility of U.S. trade policy, and the difficulty of estimating how the burden of higher import taxes will be spread among consumers, importers, and producing nations. 

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