Federal Reserve president says rate cuts may not come in 2024

Neel Kashkari said he needs to see multiple reports showing disinflation is progressing before being open to cutting interest rates

Minneapolis Federal Reserve President Neel Kashkari said Tuesday that the central bank will need to hold interest rates steady for an "extended period" that may last through the rest of the year.

Kashkari made the remarks at a Milken Institute conference, where he outlined what he would need to see in the inflation data before he can support interest rate cuts.

"I would need to see multiple positive inflation readings suggesting that the disinflation process is on track," Kashkari said.

His remarks come as decreases in inflation have largely stalled in recent months, with year-over-year inflation at 2.7% in the most recent reading. That level is well above the Fed's 2% target rate and leaves policymakers in limbo with inflation elevated, but not to such a degree that further rate hikes are clearly needed.

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Kashkari also said that he will be monitoring developments in the labor market where a "marked" shift to weaker job creation could also justify an interest rate cut.

Kashkari said in March that he thought the Fed would need to deliver two interest rate cuts in 2024, but that he may mark that down to just one cut or even no cuts, depending on the data, when the central bank meets next month when fresh projections will be released by policymakers.

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The Fed raised the benchmark federal funds rate to a 23-year high of 5.25% to 5.5% in an effort to tamp down inflation, which peaked at a 40-year high of 9.1% in June 2022.

While recent progress in reducing inflation has slowed and some data has indicated that inflation could be on the verge of reaccelerating, Kashkari echoed Fed Chair Jerome Powell in signaling that further interest rate hikes are unlikely.

He explained that the bar for a rate hike is "quite high, but it's not infinite" and that keeping rates elevated until inflation ebbs may be the ultimate course of action.

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"There is a limit when we say, 'OK, we need to do more.' I think it's much more likely we would just sit here for longer than we expect, or the public expects right now, until we see what effect our monetary policies have," Kashkari said.

Reuters contributed to this report.

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