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Sunday, June 20, 2010

Look Ahead to FOMC Statement on Wednesday

by Calculated Risk on 6/20/2010 05:17:00 PM

The previous post was the Weekly Summary and a Look Ahead.

The FOMC statement to be released on Wednesday will be interesting. This is the first scheduled FOMC meeting since the EU / ECB rescue package was announced on May 9th. In addition, some of the economic data since the last FOMC meeting has been somewhat disappointing.

Two things are nearly certain: 1) the FOMC will not increase the Fed Funds rate at this meeting, and 2) the key language about "exceptionally low levels of the federal funds rate for an extended period" will remain.

Here are a few excerpts from the last FOMC statement to see some possible changes:

Information received since the Federal Open Market Committee met in March suggests that economic activity has continued to strengthen and that the labor market is beginning to improve. Growth in household spending has picked up recently ...
Since the April meeting, growth appears to have slowed, the labor market has stumbled, and retail spending was weak. The first sentence will be less positive this meeting.
Housing starts have edged up but remain at a depressed level.
Housing starts plummeted in May.
With substantial resource slack continuing to restrain cost pressures and longer-term inflation expectations stable, inflation is likely to be subdued for some time.
It is possible that the Fed will mention the downside risk to prices (deflation). The Fed might also mention the European situation.

Last week, Jon Hilsenrath at the WSJ wrote "Federal Reserve officials are beginning to debate quietly what steps they might take if the recovery surprisingly falters or if the inflation rate falls much more". These discussions are probably part of the agenda, but I doubt there will be any mention in the FOMC statement.