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Contact Mace News President
Tony Mace tony@macenews.com 
to find a customer- and markets-oriented brand of news coverage with a level of individualized service unique to the industry. A market participant told us he believes he has his own White House correspondent as Mace News provides breaking news and/or audio feeds, stories, savvy analysis, photos and headlines delivered how you want them. And more. And this is important because you won’t get it anywhere else. That’s MICRONEWS. We know how important to you are the short advisories on what’s coming up, whether briefings, statements, unexpected changes in schedules and calendars and anything else that piques our interest.

No matter the area being covered, the reporter is always only a telephone call or message away. We check with you frequently to see how we can improve. Have a question, need to be briefed via video or audio-only on a topic’s state of play, keep us on speed dial. See the list of interest areas we cover elsewhere
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Tony Mace was the top editorial executive for Market News
International for two decades. 

Washington Bureau Chief Denny Gulino had the same title at Market News for 18 years. 

Similar experience undergirds our service in Ottawa, London, Brussels and in Asia. 

CONTRIBUTORS

Picture of Tony Mace

Tony Mace

President
Mace News

Picture of Denny Gulino

Denny Gulino

D.C. Bureau Chief
Mace News

Picture of Steven Beckner

Steven Beckner

Federal Reserve
Mace News

Picture of Vicki Schmelzer

Vicki Schmelzer

Reporter and expert on the currency market.
Mace News

Picture of Suzanne Cosgrove

Suzanne Cosgrove

Reporter and expert on derivatives and fixed income markets.
Mace News

Picture of Laurie Laird

Laurie Laird

Financial Journalist
Mace News

Picture of Max Sato

Max Sato

Reporter, economic and political news.
Japan and Canada
Mace News

FRONT PAGE

Fed Officials Not Ready To Move Rates Either Way as Iran Uncertainty Continues

— Rate Hike Sentiment Rising, But Most Inclined to Be Patient

— Easing Bias Seems Increasingly Likely To Go

By Steven K. Beckner

(MaceNews) –  Federal Reserve officials leaned half heartedly toward a potential tightening of monetary policy this week, as they struggled to keep up with the vicissitudes of the Iran conflict and its impact on energy markets and, prospectively, on the economy.

Officials have given no indication they’ll be ready to change rates at the June 16-17 meeting of the Fed’s policymaking Federal Open Market Committee, Kevin Warsh’s first as chairman. But their comments suggest it’s quite possible the FOMC will abandon the easing bias it has had in its policy statement since December, thus setting the stage for a potential future shift to tightening.

Officials such as Fed Governor Michael Barr and Cleveland Federal Reserve Bank President Beth Hammack have presented alternate scenarios in which the FOMC might conceivably want to either ease or tighten policy, with the letter increasingly seen, regrettably, as the most likely option.

For now, officials see a third scenario – an indefinite stay at current rates – as appropriate. For how long depends primarily on whether inflation worsens or moderates.

Officials have made clear they intend to look closely at the May employment report when it is released Friday morning to see how the Fed is doing on its “maximum employment” mandate.

But ahead of the report, past data have led most officials to see labor markets as relatively solid and unemployment historically low. Most recently, that view was seemingly vindicated by the ADP report that private payrolls grew by 122,000 in May.

By contrast, there is no denying how the Fed is doing on the other side of its dual mandate. Inflation, as measured by the price index for personal consumption expenditures (PCE), rose 3.8% year-over-year in April (3.2% core), and has exceeded the Fed’s 2% target for going on six years.

So most officials see the “balance of risks” as tilted decisively toward inflation. They simply aren’t yet ready to act on that predisposition, holding out hope that inflation will subside as and when tariff and oil price effects wind down.

Since its last rate cut on Dec. 10, the FOMC majority has taken the position that there can be no additional rate cuts until inflation decelerates unless labor markets weaken unexpectedly, and increasingly officials are talking about possibly needing to raise rates if labor markets remain sound.

There had been some hope for a return of disinflation last week, when the U.S. and Iran seemed on the verge of a settlement that would end the conflict and reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Oil, which had gone as high as $126 per barrel, fell below $87, but this week oil rebounded by 10% as hopes for a cessation of Middle East hostilities diminished.

As a result, policymakers find themselves in a prickly situation.

Kansas City Fed President Jeff Schmid said Thursday it is important to get inflation back down to the Fed’s 2% target, but said he and his Fed colleagues don’t want to “push the economy into recession.” He said they are asking whether they need to be “patient” about raising rates.

A cautious San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly said Thursday that the FOMC is “prepared to respond either way” to economic developments and expressed wariness about providing “forward guidance” that could end up “misguiding” the public and markets. 

Richmond Fed President Tom Barkin repeated his belief Thursday that “the Fed is well positioned to respond as appropriate” as the FOMC assess the economic impacts of the Middle East crisis.

New York Federal Reserve Bank President John Williams, usually a reliable barometer of mainstream Fed thinking, defended the status quo Wednesday, saying “Monetary policy is exactly in the right place. I don’t see any need to raise or lower interest rates right now.”

But the FOMC vice chairman made clear the easing bias can’t last much longer: “I don’t think forward guidance is particularly helpful right now in terms of trying to communicate monetary policy. I don’t see an obvious argument that we should change interest rates, but I also don’t see an obvious kind of direction where we would go in the future.”

Barr, who was also talking in terms of different policy scenarios Wednesday, said, “We’re in a good place in terms of our policy right now to wait and see to actively monitor which of these paths we may be on.”

“My own view is it’s likely to stay there for quite some time as we wait to see how this plays out,” Barr said, but he added that in a scenario of continued inflation pressure, “We might actually have to raise rates.”

Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan sounded more inclined to tighten policy Wednesday, After pointing to “strong’ economic activity and to low and “stable” labor markets, she said, “These conditions indicate that monetary policy is not restraining the economy. I am increasingly concerned that higher interest rates could be necessary later this year to fully restore price stability and appropriately balance both sides of the Fed’s dual mandate.”

Hammack also leaned gently toward eventual tightening Tuesday. “For today, it’s reasonable to keep rates steady given the uncertainties around the economic outlook,” she said. “But if recent trends continue, it may soon be appropriate to act.”

The FOMC left the funds rate in a target range of 3.5% to 3.75% on April 29. But three Federal Reserve Bank Presidents (Hammack, Logan and Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari) dissented in favor of removing from the policy statement this sentence: “In considering the extent and timing of additional adjustments to the target range for the federal funds rate, the Committee will carefully assess incoming data, the evolving outlook, and the balance of risks.” That language, introduced when the FOMC last cut rates on Dec. 10, conveyed an easing bias.

Minutes of the last FOMC meeting revealed that “many participants” wanted to drop the easing bias. And they reported that “a majority of participants highlighted …. that some policy firming would likely become appropriate if inflation were to continue to run persistently above 2%.”

Officials this week were reluctant to go further and call outright for rate hikes in the near-term, but that contingency seemed to be a growing possibility on many officials’ minds.

Daly steered clear Thursday of saying where monetary policy is headed, but echoed others in saying it is in a good place for now.

“We are prepared to respond either way, whatever the economy brings,” Daly told a Bloomberg Tech conference in San Francisco.

She implied the FOMC should drop its easing bias, saying, “I think giving more forward guidance about what’s possible could be misguiding in the end, because we just have to wait for the economy to evolve.”

Schmid, usually thought of as one of the more “hawkish” Fed presidents, sounded more tentative Thursday in assessing what the FOMC ought to do.

Asked about the biggest risk facing the economy, he replied, “right now it’s about inflation.”

Noting that inflation has been above target for over five years and that the Fed was having trouble getting it down to 2% even before the Iran war, he told an economic forum sponsored by his Bank in Hochatown, Oklahoma.

But he said the Fed is trying to hit its inflation target “without pushing the economy into recession.”

Schmid said Fed officials are asking themselves, “Do we stay patient on rates?” With inflation now above 3 ½%, they are asking, “is it temporary…or do we act? Is now the time to raise rates a quarter or two and see if we can tamp this thing down..every month?”

“That’s the nature of our discussion” at every meeting, he said.

Whatever the FOMC ultimately does with rates, Schmid said, “We want it to be a net positive for the American people (and) not do any harm unnecessarily.”

Williams said Wednesday that, monetary policy is “exactly in the right place,” with “(no) need to raise or lower interest rates right now.”

But Williams spoke warily of inflation and inflation expectations on Yahoo Finance. While tariff and oil price increases should have “more of a one-time kind of effect,” he said he is watching for signs that inflation is “getting more persistently embedded.”

“I’m not seeing that yet, but definitely there’s a risk of that given how much of a kind of a boost to inflation we’re seeing,” he said.

Williams went on to say that inflation risks have increased “significantly,” while at the same time risks to employment have “edged down.”

“I don’t think forward guidance is particularly helpful right now in terms of trying to communicate monetary policy,” Williams said. “I don’t see an obvious argument that we should change interest rates, but I also don’t see an obvious kind of direction where we would go in the future.”

Barr echoed Williams and others Wednesday in saying “we’re in a good place in terms of our policy right now to wait and see to actively monitor which of these paths we may be on,” and he said “ it’s likely to stay there for quite some time as we wait to see how this plays out.”

But Barr warned that a scenario of persistently elevated inflation could force the FOMC to tighten policy.

“I think we’re in a tough spot in the sense that these shocks — tariffs, and energy — have continued to put pressure on inflation, and if you look at the economy right now..we’re not near the target we need to be, 2%, and in some measures we’re drifting away form it with oil and tariffs,” he told a Washington conference of the Community Development Bankers Association.

“We want to be sure before take our next step,” Barr said. “In one scenario..one time price effects, raise the level of prices but don’t create inflation dynamics…(then) should see inflation coming back down towards target.. (but) we haven’t seen it yet…if that’s the case we can probably hold rates steady for awhile..as (price shocks) play through… eventually come to a place of cutting rates … . We’re not there now.

However, he said, “If you think of another path…(where) shocks are bleeding through more broadly into the economy .. (Fed would) start to worry more about inflation…. The risk, if we see that second scenario, is that we might actually have to raise rates.”

Logan, one of those who dissented against keeping the easing bias at the last FOMC meeting, was more hawkish than most in Wednesday remarks at The University of Texas at El Paso, as she focused far more on inflation and inflation expectations than on threats to the economy. .

“Above-target inflation can become entrenched if it persists too long,” she warned. “Inflation expectations would make it more costly to restore price stability. I am closely watching movements in market prices for short-term and long-term inflation compensation, as well as surveys of inflation expectations.”

Logan said “economic activity remains strong” and “the labor market appears stable and broadly balanced.” What’s more, “Financial conditions are accommodative.”

“These conditions indicate that monetary policy is not restraining the economy,” she concluded. “I am increasingly concerned that higher interest rates could be necessary later this year to fully restore price stability and appropriately balance both sides of the Fed’s dual mandate.”

Hammack, another dissenter, also sounded the alarm about inflation Tuesday

“The longer inflation remains above our goal, the greater the risk that it feeds into expectations and becomes embedded in wages, contracts, and pricing behavior,” she told the City Club of Cleveland. This is why I often use the phrase ‘in a timely fashion’ when I speak of returning inflation to our objective.”

Hammack said “sharp increases in oil prices can pose a challenge to monetary policy. They raise production costs for many goods that derive from oil, and rising gasoline prices increase transportation costs. These forces put upward pressure on the prices of many goods and services, challenging the inflation side of our mandate.”

She said higher energy costs also pose risks to employment, because they “can slow consumer spending and, in turn, economic activity and employment growth.”

That presents the Fed with a dilemma, according to Hammack. “While higher inflation usually calls for more restrictive monetary policy, a softer labor market usually calls for more accommodative monetary policy. To balance these two outcomes, it’s sometimes best for policymakers to ‘look through’ an oil shock by holding interest rates steady.”

But it was plain she sees the greatest risks on the inflation side. for while “the economy has been resilient so far,” and while labor market data “point to resilience and stability,” inflation poses a greater threat in her view.

“By contrast, the picture for inflation is not encouraging,” said Hammack. “Inflation is too high and is moving higher.” Even after stripping out energy and food, core PCE inflation is “also well above our objective and well above levels from six months or a year ago.”

She said the Fed needs to be “forward-looking when setting interest rates” and therefore presented different scenarios.

“Under one scenario, it’s possible that an extended period of high oil prices and supply chain pressures will boost inflation while eventually weighing on growth and the labor market,” she said. “In this case, policy could remain on hold for some time to balance weaker prospects for the labor market with elevated inflation.”

“Alternatively, a sharper downturn in spending and the labor market could warrant a more accommodative stance of policy, although I see this as less likely,” Hammack continued.

However, she went on, “there is a growing risk that inflation could remain elevated if energy costs do not come down quickly and if businesses feel they have no choice other than to raise prices.”

“If inflation persists at an elevated rate, then more restrictive monetary policy could well be needed to bring inflation back to 2 percent in a timely fashion,” she added.

Like many of her colleagues, Hammack placed heavy emphasis on inflation expectations. “With the economy now in its sixth year of elevated inflation, consumers, businesses, and financial markets may start to build in expectations for higher future inflation.”

“Increases in inflation expectations that threaten our goal warrant taking decisive action,” she added.

Hammack suggested there is no urgency to move policy in either direction. “For today, it’s reasonable to keep rates steady given the uncertainties around the economic outlook.”

“But if recent trends continue, it may soon be appropriate to act,” she continued. “Based on the data, I’m more concerned about the growing risks of persistently elevated inflation than the risks to full employment and also that monetary policy may not be sufficiently restrictive to bring inflation down to 2%t.”

“If we wait for definitive evidence that high inflation has become embedded in the economy, it may require larger policy adjustments, at greater cost,” she added.

Barkin took his usual balanced approach Thursday morning in talking about how the Fed should respond to the impact of the Iran war.

So far, he said the economy “remains resilient,” but as the war continues, “the extent of its impact will depend on how long it lasts and how long it takes to rebuild supply chains and manufacturing capacity once it’s resolved.”

Barkin, repeating late May remarks in Raleigh in Loudon County, Va., said the “approach of looking through supply shocks has worked well for a generation thanks to what economists call ‘anchored long-term inflation expectations.’”

But with supply shocks seemingly becoming “more frequent,” he said the Fed’s job cold become “more challenging conditions.”

Whether the Fed will “have the luxury of riding out all the waves that come our way” will depend on “how much businesses, consumers, and inflation expectations can take,” he said. “First, will businesses get queasy? … Second, will consumers abandon ship? Thus far, they’ve continued to spend.”

Finally, Barkin asked, “How secure is the inflation expectations anchor?” So far, he said long-term inflation expectations “remain well anchored.” But he added, “With inflation above our 2% target for over five years now, it’s worth asking whether the cumulative impact of so many waves risks loosening the anchor.”

“The answers to those three questions will determine whether the Fed still has the luxury to look through supply shocks,” he added.

Barkin said the FOMC’s decision to hold rates st eady on April 29 “made sense to give ourselves some time before setting sail.”

“Going forward, I wouldn’t be surprised if we continue to see rough seas that pressure the employment side of our mandate, the inflation side of our mandate, or conceivably both,” he continued. “If we do, the Fed is well positioned to respond as appropriate.”

US ISM Services Sector Activity Picks Up in May but Faces Mideast Conflict Impact of Higher Costs of Fuels, Other Oil Products; Employment Remains Weak

–ISM’s Miller: Fed Likely to Hold Interest Rates Steady in Near Term as Inflation Mainly Due to Fuel Prices, Exerting Some Downward Pressure on Growth

By Max Sato

(MaceNews) – U.S. services sector activity accelerated in May after slowing in the previous two months thanks to higher new orders, but the sector continues to face rising costs for fuels and transportation amid the lingering Middle East conflict; employment contracted for a third straight month, industry data released Wednesday showed.

The purchasing managers index for services compiled by the Institute for Supply Management, which indicates direction of activity, rose a modest 0.9 percentage point to 54.5, above the consensus forecast of 53.7. It followed a 0.4-point dip to 53.6 in April, a 2.1-point drop to 54.0 in March and a 2.3-point gain to a more than three-year high of 56.1 in February. The index is 1.7 points above its 12-month moving average of 52.8 in May and stayed above the average for the eighth straight month.

“May’s services PMI is the fifth month in a row with an increase in the 12-month PMI average, up 1.1 percentage points from 51.7 in December 2025 to its current 52.8,” ISM Services Business Survey Committee Chair Steve Miller said.

The services sector is now in expansion for 23 months in a row, weathering the drag from the protectionist U.S. policy, while manufacturing activity expanded for the fifth straight month in May, emerging from the tariff-triggered doldrums of 2025.

Of the four subindexes that make up the composite PMI, employment is the only one that is in contraction (below 50 for three months in a row) and also the only one that remains below its 12-month moving average. The index stood at 47.9 in May, down slightly from 48.0 in April, when it rose 2.8 points after plunging 6.6 points to a more than two-year low of 45.2 in March from a 12-month high of 51.8 in February.

“When looked at the combination of a slightly faster contraction in the employment index, it looks like productivity continues to enable companies to more effectively keep up with high new orders of business activity without adding people.” Miller told reporters. “Respondents commented frequently that companies instituted hiring freezes or not backfilling vacated positions and most respondents reported they were holding flat in employment month over month.”

Reluctance to hire also comes from what appears to be a short-term boost to new orders, which many firms attributed to “seasonality,” he added.

Elsewhere, the prices index remains elevated above 70, rising 0.6 point to a nearly four-year high of 71.3 (the highest since 72.6 in August 2022). “For the third month in a row, no commodities in the report listed as down in price, with multimonth runs of being up in price for aluminum, copper, diesel, gasoline, software licensing and transportation,” Miller said in the report.

“We are seeing the dual effects of the administration’s tariff policy dynamics and the conflict in the Persian Gulf affect our pricing,” a firm in the accommodation and food services industry told the ISM. “Suppliers across numerous industries are trying to pass price increases for fuel surcharges and increased input costs for resin-based products and the like.”

An education services provider also said, “Starting to see increased supply constraints and associated price increases, especially for construction materials and computers like laptops and tablets.”

Asked about the impact of the combination of weak employment and rising inflation on the Federal Reserve’s policymaking amid market expectations that some central banks will to have raise interest rates, Miller replied, “I was encouraged that we didn’t see a bigger jump in prices. However, the direct answer to your question is that I can’t see any room to decrease interest rates in the near term. I would presume we will see a wait and see based on the initial attitude of the new Fed chair.”

“With higher costs of petroleum already creating some downward pressure in economic activity, I would presume that they wouldn’t go ahead and increase interest rates given that probably the majority of this price increase is directly related to petroleum costs,” he said.

Only a slight rise in the inventory sentiment index indicates that “the significant increase in inventories was in line with plans, not disruption in demand/supply planning,” Miller said. The latest inventory buildup seems to be arising from both a physical increase in stored goods and rising costs, he said.

Miller said he had expected to see much slower supply deliveries in the face of shortages of jet fuel and other refined petroleum products caused by the Iran war but that the May report indicates the impact on transportation has been limited to prices so far and not creating availability problems. The supply deliveries subindex fell 1.6 points in May to 55.2 but it is still 2.1 points above its 12-month average.

Three of the four sub-indexes that directly factor into the services PMI were in expansion territory (prior figures in parentheses).

Business activity 57.7 (55.9) +1.8, the highest since 57.7 in October 2024.

New orders 57.3 (53.5) +3.8; The index rose 2.0 points to 60.6 in March to hit the highest since 61.6 in February 2023.

Employment 47.9 (48.0) -0.1; The index slumped 6.6 points to 45.2 in March, falling to the lowest since 43.7 in December 2023, only a month after it rose 1.5 points to 51.8 to reach the highest since 53.9 in February 2025; the last contraction was seen in a six-month period to November 2025.

Supplier deliveries 55.2 (56.8) -1.6; In April, the index hit the slowest since 57.8 in July 2022 (above 50 means slower deliveries).

Among other sub-indexes:

Prices 71.3 (70.7) +0.6, the highest since 72.6 in August 2022; above 70 for the third straight month, above 60 for 18 months in a row. The index fell 3.6 points to 63.0 in February, the lowest since March 2025 (60.9); above 60 for 16 months in a row

Inventories 62.5 (53.1) +9.4; matched the record high of 62.5 hit in May 2010.

Inventory sentiment 55.2 (55.1) +0.1; 0.2 point above its 12-month average. Despite the jump in the inventories index, the slight 0.1-point rise in the inventory sentiment index “indicates respondent confidence that business activity will remain strong amid higher costs, so expanding inventories are not of concern,” Miller said in the report.

Preview: Forecasters See Japan’s Household Spending Hit By Rising Costs in April Report

Friday, June 5, 2026
0830 JST (2350 GMT/1930 EDT Monday, May 11) The Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications releases the April average household spending.
Mace News median forecasts: -1.6% y/y (range: -2.7% to 0.3%) vs. Mar -2.9%; +0.4% m/m (range: -0.5% to +2.0%) vs. Mar -1.3%

By Chikafumi Hodo

TOKYO (MaceNews) – Persisting geopolitical tensions in the Middle East are increasingly affecting consumer sentiment and seen to be leading to a fifth straight month of declines in annual Japanese real household spending in April.

Household expenditure for two or more people is seen falling 1.6% on the year in April after slipping 2.9% in March. On a month-on-month basis, household spending is expected to rise 0.4% in April after falling 1.3% in March.

In March, consumers remained cautious about spending beyond necessities amid low wage growth in real terms, trimming expenditures on eating out and gift money at weddings, while they paid higher dental bills in recent months. There has also been a widespread shift toward more affordable mobile communications options.

April spending is seen as having a mixed picture, but underlying caution over the U.S.-Israel war against Iran appears to be dampening consumption appetite. Domestic supermarket sales rose on the year for the first time in two months in April, while gains in sales volumes in the nationwide consumer price index remained limited. This suggests that overall household expenditure could have been constrained.

The average real household income increased by 4.7% on the year in March and annualized real wage growth is expected to continue at around that pace in the coming months. Still, the underlying geopolitical tensions appear to be weighing on consumer sentiment, with concerns that disruptions to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz may already be affecting actual consumer spending behavior.

MORE NEWS

CONTACT US/SALES

President, Mace News:

tony@macenews.com


Washington Bureau Chief:

denny@macenews.com


SUBSCRIPTIONS

Contact Mace News President
Tony Mace tony@macenews.com 
to find a customer- and markets-oriented brand of news coverage with a level of individualized service unique to the industry. A market participant told us he believes he has his own White House correspondent as Mace News provides breaking news and/or audio feeds, stories, savvy analysis, photos and headlines delivered how you want them. And more. And this is important because you won’t get it anywhere else. That’s MICRONEWS. We know how important to you are the short advisories on what’s coming up, whether briefings, statements, unexpected changes in schedules and calendars and anything else that piques our interest.

No matter the area being covered, the reporter is always only a telephone call or message away. We check with you frequently to see how we can improve. Have a question, need to be briefed via video or audio-only on a topic’s state of play, keep us on speed dial. See the list of interest areas we cover elsewhere
on this site.

You can have two weeks reduced price no-obligation trial for $199. No self-renewing contracts. Suspend, renew coverage at any time. Stay with a topic like trade while its hot and suspend coverage or switch coverage areas when it’s not. We serve customers one by one 24/7.

Tony Mace was the top editorial executive for Market News International for two decades. 

Washington Bureau Chief Denny Gulino had the same title at Market News for 18 years. 

Similar experience undergirds our service in Ottawa, London, Brussels and in Asia.

 

Mace News Archives