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– Downplays Soft CPI Report As ‘One Data Point’; Mustn’t ‘Cherry Pick’
– Balance Sheet Should Be Used Only in Crisis; Interest Rates Should Predominate
– Refuses To Give ‘Forward Guidance’ On What FOMC Will Do with Rates
By Steven K. Beckner
(MaceNews) – Federal Reserve Chairman Kevin Warsh stressed again Tuesday that the Fed’s primary focus at present must be on lowering inflation at a time when the economy and labor markets are doing relatively well.
Warsh, testifying before Congress for the first time since becoming Fed chief on May 22, downplayed an unexpectedly favorable consumer price index report released shortly before his appearance before the House Financial Services Committee.
Presenting the Fed’s semi-annual Monetary Policy Report to Congress for the first time, Warsh declined to give any hint of what the Fed’s rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee will do when it meets late this month but promised “a good family fight” over the appropriate course of monetary policy.
Warsh testified that it remains his preference to reduce the size of the Fed’s balance sheet but said he did not want to “prejudge” what a task force on that subject which he appointed might recommend. He doubted whether the balance sheet can shrink back to its size before the Great Financial Crisis of 2008, but said that in normal times, interest rate policy should predominate.
He made clear, as he has before, that he will not be providing “forward guidance” on the future path of interest rates.
The Monetary Policy Report itself declared that the Fed “will deliver price stability,” echoing the June 17 policy statement of the FOMC. Warsh did not use that exact assertion in his prepared testimony, but said it repeatedly in response to questions from legislators.
Inflation, as measured by the price index for personal consumption expenditures, has been running above the Fed’s 2% target for more than five years, as Warsh noted. It was up 4.1% from a year earlier in May (3.4% for the core PCE).
“Among the factors contributing to higher measured prices are earlier tariff hikes that pushed up domestic prices of some imported goods, a surge in energy prices associated with constraints on oil supplies following the start of the Middle East conflict in late February, and increased demand for some high-tech products that support artificial intelligence (AI) applications,” the Report said.
More encouraging news on inflation came shortly before Warsh began his testimony from the Labor Department. Its Consumer Price Index unexpectedly dropped 0.4% in June (largest single-month decline since April 2020) and was 3.5% higher than a year ago. The core CPI was flat in June and up 2.6% from a year earlier.
Warsh acknowledged that the CPI report was “positive relative to expectations,” but called it just “one data point.”
“I’m not for cherry picking,” he said. “I’m not going to show up here and say mission accomplished ….There’s more work to do.”
Warsh was somewhat guarded, presumably not wanting to prejudge the outcome of the July 28-29 FOMC meeting. But he made clear that neither Congress, nor the markets nor the general public should expect the kind of advance hints about monetary policy that was frequently doled out by predecessors.
“In communications, if we were to share with you our every passing thought … we’re human..if we were to give you my (view of)..what do in two weeks…then we would find ourselves taking information consistent with our prior (statements) and rejecting (later) information that’s not consistent.“
Warsh has appointed a task force on communications that will be studying and making recommendations on not just “forward guidance,” but also on such things as the FOMC’s quarterly Summary of Economic Projections with its “dot plot” of funds rate projections and economic forecasts.
The eventual communication reforms “are intended to make the conduct of monetary policy swifter, more sound … to get policy right…,” he said. “In my judgment, that demands an open mind — not pre-committing to a decision before we take it inside the four walls of the Federal Reserve.’
Warsh declined, when pressed, to promise to hold a news conference following each and every FOMC meeting, deferring once again to the task force to make recommendations about that. He vowed only to “make sure you know what we’re doing and why.”
At its June 16-17 meeting, the FOMC left the federal funds rate unchanged in a target range of 3.5% to 3.75%, but it made a major change in its policy statement by ending “forward guidance” on the path of the funds rate, thereby removing a six-month-old bias toward a resumption of rate cuts.
FOMC participants, not including Warsh, fueled speculation that its next move may be to raise rates by projecting that the funds rate will be 25 basis points higher at the end of this year while simultaneously revising their inflation forecasts up substantially in the SEP. They forecast that the PCE price index will be up 3.6% from a year earlier in the fourth quarter – compared to just 2.7% in the March SEP.
Warsh gave no hint that rates are headed higher in his inaugural post-FOMC press conference, but neither did he encourage hopes for rate cuts, despite his “dovish” reputation. He said the funds rate “dots” had been written “with pencils” and with “humility,” because officials “understand the world is changing quite quickly …. So, I didn’t hear tons of conviction.”
The recently minted Fed chief was no more forthcoming in presenting the Monetary Policy Report to Congress. Warsh’s prepared testimony, which will be reprised Wednesday before the Senate Banking Committee. was the most concise ever.
“The Fed’s number one objective is to get monetary policy right—or as near to it as we possibly can. That is our clear and constant aim, the star we steer by,” he said. “And if we get policy right—and we will—the inflation surge of the last five years will be a thing of the past.”
Making clear that he and the FOMC see inflation as their biggest challenge, Warsh said, “My colleagues and I recognize that high inflation has been an undue burden on American households and businesses. While monthly price fluctuations are inevitable—especially in an unsettled world—underlying inflation over longer time horizons is determined largely by monetary policy.”
“The members of our Committee have no tolerance for persistently elevated inflation,” he continued. “And we share a resolute commitment to restoring price stability.”
The FOMC can focus overwhelmingly on inflation, he implied, because “economic activity is expanding at a solid pace, showing resilience in the face of recent developments…..”
Meanwhile, “America’s labor market appears broadly stable,” he said. “Job creation has kept pace with the workforce. The unemployment rate is low and has changed little over the past year. We’re seeing relatively few layoffs, only slight variance in the rate of job vacancies, and solid growth in nominal wages.” Productivity growth “has been strong,” he added.
Warsh took particular note of “the rapid pace” of business investment, which he said, “appears to be accelerating,” “reflects, in large part, the construction of data centers and the immense demand for the AI-related equipment and software that fill them.”
While seeing AI investment as a positive for the U.S. economy, he said “we at the Fed are monitoring the implications for inflation and the labor market.
Warsh again suggested that his chairmanship begins a new era for the Fed, claiming the central bank “stands at a hinge point of history.”
He said he and his FOMC collegues are “considering how best to advance the conduct of policy. We have a duty to point the institution forward—to take a fresh look at current practices to make sure we are serving our objectives.”
“And we are going about it systematically,” he added, pointing to the five task forces he has appoint ed to study Fed communications; balance sheet policies; data collection; productivity, and “inflation frameworks.”
When it came time for members of the House Financial Services Committee to ask questions, many wanted Warsh to elaborate on the FOMC’s commitment to restore price stability and what that would entail in terms of monetary policy action.
Warsh responded by declaring multiple times that the FOMC “will deliver price stability,” but he refused to be specific about the steps the FOMC will take to get inflation down to 2%.
He described the Fed’s anti-inflation strategy as consisting of three steps: first, a “resolute” commitment to the 2% inflation goal; second, “tak(ing) ownership – not pass the buck or blame others, and third, “we have the tools to deliver” 2% inflation.
“And we will deliver,” he emphasized.
Putting it differently in response to another question, Warsh said the Fed’s first undertaking on the road to 2% inflation is to “make clear to you and to the American people this is not a commitment we’re going to walk away from; the higher inflation we’ve had for more than five years is not acceptable .”
Second, he told congressmen, the FOMC will “take responsibility” and have “no anguish” about achieving that objective. “You gave us a lot of tools to deliver on our commitment (to price stability), and we intend to do it.”
Third, “we have the tools,” he reiterated. “We have a printing press, we have a balance sheet and we have interest rates. Over the coming period I’m going to ask my colleagues…how to deploy those tools.:
While declaring that “we have the power, we have the tools” to slash inflation, Warsh declined to say how those tools will be used.
“I’m not in the business of trying to prejudge what the Committee will do,” he said, adding that after “a good family fight … when we have news for you exactly what to do (to lower inflation)…we will be very clear.”
Warsh said the Fed “cannot have a short-term immediate effect on prices in stores.” Rather, “our job, which we are resolute to accomplish, is to make sure price changes don’t broaden out.”
“Unfortunately that’s what’s happened in the last 63 months — sticky prices,” he went on. “The longer prices have been above the 2% target, it’s usually harder to get them lower … our job is to take sticky prices and unstick them.”
While focusing heavily on reducing inflation, Warsh was careful not to neglect the “maximum employment” side of the Fed’s dual mandate. He told congressmen the Fed is just as committed to that goal.
But he said there is no “cruel choice between stable prices and full employment. If we can assure stable prices, the economy can thrive, businesses can hire more employees, and America can … continue to be the envy of the world.”
“I don’t think it’s an either/or choice,” Warsh added. “At different times we may focus more on one or the other, but they’re consistent with each other.”
Having said all that, though, he made clear he does not think the economy is in need of additional monetary stimulus, notwithstanding his reputation coming into the chairmanship of being a rate cutter, as he pointed to “solid” growth and the “remarkably resilient” labor market.
Although he was reluctant to say which tools the FOMC would use to reduce inflation or how it would use them, Warsh strongly suggested that the FOMC will rely on changes in interest rates, not the balance sheet.
Prior to his nomination by President Trump, Warsh was outspoken in blaming high inflation partially on the vast expansion of the balance sheet through renewed “quantitative easing” during Covid and in advocating that the balance sheet be greatly reduced. He was a bit more reticent Tuesday.
One of his task forces is devoted to the balance sheet, and Warsh said he does “not want to prejudge” what the task force will recommend.
But “as a first approximation, in normal times the Federal Reserve should be a price taker, not a price maker,” he said, implying that the Fed now has too large a role in the bond market.
“When it comes to a crisis, I can’t say for sure (the Fed) will sit on the sidelines,” he added.
In judging the proper role of the balance sheet as a policy tool, Warsh said, “We have to look at a mosaic of information … how best to conduct monetary policy … with clear and simple rules….
“We have to go back to first principles and ask if this large balance sheet of longer duration is consistent with good monetary policy and ask if there is a better regime — how to get from the current regime to something else, with a goal not to disrupt financial markets.”
Warsh doubted the Fed can go from the current regime of “ample reserves” back to the “scarce reserves” regime with a smaller balance sheet that the Fed had before the Great Financial Crisis
But he made clear he does want change in balance sheet policy.
“In periods of crisis, when markets aren’t clearing, I’m willing to be quite aggressive in what the Fed does with the balance sheet, with what assets that we buy as necessary in unusual and exigent circumstances,” he said.
But “when crises are over, monetary policy in my view, should be driven almost exclusively by interest rate policy.”
Warsh quoted former Fed Governor Jeremy Stein in saying “interest rates get in the cracks.”
“Interest rates don’t favor one class of people versus another,” he said. “They don’t favor those who have financial assets more than those who are living off their bi-monthly paychecks. So, I like interest rates as the dominant way of making monetary policy, and I prefer to use balance sheets (only) when crises are real.”
“However,” Warsh added, “I’ve inherited a very large balance sheet with a complicated set of assets, and I am open-minded to reforms, as are my colleagues, and I’m keen to work with the task force to achieve that.”
– Inflation And Monetary Policy Are ‘At A Crossroads’
– Economy Solid’, Employment ‘Stable’; So, Focus Must Be on 2% Inflation Target
By Steven K. Beckner
(MaceNews) – On the eve of a critical inflation report, Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller declared Monday that a bad reading could necessitate an early Fed interest rate hike.
Waller, who not long ago was thought of as being one of the more dovish Fed policymakers, instead took a very hawkish perspective in remarks to the New York Association for Business Economics.
Describing himself as “concerned about the elevated pace of core inflation,” he said, “inflation and monetary policy are at a crossroads” with the July 28-29 meeting of the Fed’s rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee rapidly approaching.
With the economy enjoying “solid” growth and labor markets “stable,” Waller said the Fed’s focus has to be on inflation, which has exceeded the Fed’s 2% target for going on six years.
Delaying action against inflation could risk a further acceleration of inflation, as well as a deterioration of inflation expectations that would make inflation even harder to rein in, he cautioned.
On Tuesday morning, the Labor Department will be releasing its consumer price index for June, and Waller warned, “If we get another hot reading on core inflation … then the FOMC will need to consider tightening monetary policy in the near term.”
The June CPI report, which will be released ahead of congressional testimony by Chair Kevin Warsh on the Fed’s semi-annual Monetary Policy Report, is less important than the Commerce Department’s price index for personal consumption expenditures (PCE), but will still get a close, extrapolating look on Wall Street and at the Fed.
Some are hoping for a softer result than in May, when the CPI increased 0.5% for the month and 4.2% from a year earlier. The core CPI, excluding volatile food and energy prices, was up 0.2% on the month and 2.9% on year.
The CPI, as well as Wednesday’s Producer Price Index, will be used to calculate estimates of the PCE inflation rate for June. In May the PCE registered 4.1% overall and 3.4% on a core basis from a year earlier.
The FOMC has held the key federal funds rate in a target range of 3.5% to 3.75% since it concluded a series of rate cuts totaling 100 basis points in December, but at its June 17 meeting, FOMC participants projected the funds rate will need to rise by 25 basis points by the end of the year to a median 3.8% (3.75% to 4.0%) as they significantly boosted their inflation forecasts.
A bad inflation reading this week could force the FOMC to begin raising rates as soon as the late July meeting, implied Waller, who not long ago was an advocate of rate cuts when he was competing with Waller for the Fed chairmanship.
He said the FOMC cannot afford to merely “look through” energy price hikes, assuming they will recede, because core inflation has also been stubbornly high.
“Because core inflation is a good guide to future inflation,” he said. “I am concerned that, if this upward trend continues, it will be hard to push inflation back toward the Committee’s 2% goal with monetary policy at its current setting.”
Waller recalled “the mistake we made in 2021 by not responding sooner to the high inflation we observed,” and said he is “determined to avoid repeating it.”
He allowed for the possibility that the FOMC won’t have to raise rates, saying, “there is still a credible case for inflation to begin to fall back to our 2% goal with policy at its current setting.”
“But,” he added, “I am concerned about the equally plausible case that data in the coming weeks will show that inflation will remain at its elevated level or even trend higher, requiring tighter monetary policy in the near term.”
While “committed to returning inflation to the FOMC’s 2% goal,” Waller said he is “also determined to avoid over tightening policy and risking a recession.”
But he went on to suggest that recession is now the least of the Fed’s worries.
“Economic activity continues to be solid…,” he said. “(S)pending appears to have held up reasonably well. At the same time, businesses continued to make investments related to artificial intelligence (AI).”
What’s more, downward risks to the Fed’s “maximum employment” mandate are few, Waller indicated. “
Together, “(A)though there has been some noise in the labor market data recently, I believe the story there is one of stability and a balance between supply and demand…..Other data in recent months support the idea that the labor market is stable and balanced.”
And so, Waller asserted, “Unless I see evidence of a significantly weakening labor market, my focus will be on inflation.”
While surging energy costs have driven up overall price indices, “more concerning is the escalation in core inflation, which, at a 12-month rate of 3.4% in May, was more than 0.5 percentage point higher than last October,” he said, adding that these core price pressures are “quite broad.”
“Sometimes a big change in only one component of core prices can move the total significantly without reflecting broader pressures from escalating inflation, but that doesn’t appear to be the case this time,’ he elaborated. “Both core goods prices and core services inflation are up relative to last year. And, they stand well above their averages at times when inflation was running persistently close to 2% percent, such as the six years from 2002 through 2007.”
Waller, who was speaking just as a flare-up in tensions with Iran was pushing oil prices back up, said, “I do expect a deceleration of headline inflation due to declining oil prices, starting with the inflation data we get this week.”
But he reiterated, “I will be focused on core inflation, and on that count, there are recent signs of continued pressure on goods prices.”
Waller attributed upward pressures on core inflation to three factors: tariffs, energy prices, and “spillovers from demand for the AI build-out.”
Regarding the latter, he said AI-related demand “is being reflected in some large price increases on selected goods such as semiconductors, computer chips, servers, computers, and peripherals.” He said those price pressures “could be a larger factor if the investment surge for AI continues.”
The FOMC must be ready to respond, possibly in coming weeks, Waller argued.
“Overall, I am monitoring price movements and am alert to the risk that the increase in core inflation is a sign that inflationary pressures are spreading through the economy,” he said. “The FOMC has to be ready to tighten monetary policy to prevent a repeat of the 2021-to-2022 inflation episode.”
Nevertheless, Waller described himself as “cautious” about raising rates as steeply as it did then because of two factors: “The first is that today’s labor market isn’t nearly as tight…..Another difference with 2022 is that inflation expectations today seem well anchored.”
But he said those who maintain “anchored” inflation expectations allow the Fed to avoid raising rates are “wrong,” although he said rate hikes may have to be “less persistent.”
“In this situation, the central bank only faces one problem—getting inflation back to target,’ Waller declared.
During previous inflation periods, when inflation expectations were less “anchored,” the Fed had to raise rates aggressively, he recalled.
“Thankfully, we are not in this position today,” he said. “But it does not mean we can be lackadaisical in responding to inflation that is well above target and headed in the wrong direction.”
Looking ahead to the CPI and PPI reports, Waller said he “would be very pleased to see a lower reading on core inflation, but after its escalation over the first half of this year, I will need to see several months of lower readings to feel that inflation is moving in the right direction…..”
“I think that is still a reasonable outcome, and I would then continue to hold the policy rate at its current target range,” he continued.
“But,” he added, “If we get another hot reading on core inflation this week, then the FOMC will need to consider tightening monetary policy in the near term.”
–May Machinery Orders Set for Pullback after April Surge but Strong Demand for Computers, AI-Linked Equipment Seen Intact
By Max Sato
(MaceNews) – Bank of Japan policymakers have received evidence this month that the domestic economy has been resilient, overcoming high fuel costs and material shortages triggered by the Middle East conflict amid the global artificial intelligence boom and solid nominal wage growth.
The bank’s board made it clear that it will continue to raise rates after it decided in a majority vote in June to raise the target of the overnight interest rate by 25 basis points (0.25 percentage point) to 1%.
To ease market jitters, BOJ officials have also repeated that they will react swiftly to a rapid rise in long-term rates by raising purchases of Japanese government bonds and conducting fixed-rate JGB purchase operations among other tools. They have been gradually reducing asset purchases as part of the policy normalization process.
Many economists and market participants expect the BOJ to conduct its sixth rate hike in the current cycle by the end of the year, possibly at the Dec. 17-18 meeting, when board members may be able to see early indications of whether large firms will continue raising wages at the recent pace of about 5% in fiscal 2027 starting in April. Some BOJ watchers are calling for a rate hike at the Oct. 29-30 meeting when the board updates its medium-term growth and inflation projections as well as risk analysis in the quarterly Outlook Report but others argue that BOJ officials may need more time to assess the impact of the Mideast conflict as the fate of the latest U.S.-Iran ceasefire deal remains uncertain.
In the BOJ’s quarterly report on regional economies released on July 9, all nine regions in Japan described their economies as either recovering moderately, picking up or picking up moderately while five regions continued to note that there were some soft spots.
BOJ branch managers reported that supply disruptions and material shortages caused by the Iran war exerted downward pressures on exports and production but many of them noted that the likelihood of a significant decline had decreased compared to an earlier stage of the conflict as Japan had secured, at least temporarily, alternative supply sources and transportation routes bypassing the Gulf.
On the upside, the report showed that the global artificial intelligence boom had boosted orders for semiconductor-producing equipment and electronic components and that AI-related demand was also spreading to power and power supply equipment, telecommunications equipment and molds among other areas.
As department store sales data have shown in recent months, branch managers pointed to robust spending on high-end goods by affluent domestic consumers in urban areas who are benefiting on rising stock prices. Solid wage hikes by large firms, averaging 5% for the third consecutive year (high for Japan), have also supported the tourism, accommodations and food and beverage sectors.
Sales of air conditioners and automobiles are growing in response to regulatory and tax changes while the government’s on-and-off fuel and utility subsidies are alleviating the impact of high energy costs. But the report also said against the backdrop of cautious spending patterns among many households, supermarkets and other retailers have seen sales of certain goods drop when they mark up their prices.
Branch managers reported that companies in the materials sector continued to pass rising labor and supply costs on to their selling prices while suppliers of food and daily necessities are considering whether to raise their prices, citing the Middle East situation. The timing of such markups is likely to be in the summer (usually from July to September). Small businesses told branch managers that they had failed to fully reflect rising procurement costs in sales prices, which in turn is depressing their profits.
The latest BOJ data showed that producer inflation in Japan continued to accelerate to 7.1% in June from upwardly revised gains of 6.6% in May and 5.4% in April as fuel costs rose further to reflect an earlier spike in crude oil prices and global memory chip shortages pushed up the prices for computers and other electronic goods. The weak yen also kept imports expensive. Crude oil prices slipped to around pre-Iran war levels in June on expectations that Washington and Iran would follow up on their ceasefire agreement but it takes some time before it filters through to product prices.
In the coming week, machinery orders for May are widely expected to slip back after surging in April but the trend for the key indicator of capital investment is likely to confirm that there are strong business investment intensions despite the lingering Mideast conflict.
Data released on July 1 showed the Bank of Japan’s quarterly Tankan business sentiment survey recorded an unexpected improvement among many large manufacturers in the June quarter as the positive impact of solid export demand for production machinery and computer chips appeared to have reduced the drag from high producer prices caused by an earlier spike in global crude oil prices and domestic naphtha shortages.
Non-ferrous metals producers saw their confidence unexpectedly jump from the March quarter while the auto industry sentiment slipped only slightly, indicating that those sectors have weathered the negative impact of stiff import duties slapped by the Trump administration last year.
Despite uncertainty generated by the Mideast conflict, large firms revised up their combined plans to increase investment in equipment by 11.5% for fiscal 2026 ending next March, up from the 3.3% rise projected in March. This seems to reflect widespread labor shortages and strong global needs to build artificial intelligence data centers. Smaller firms turned slightly more cautious by forecasting an 8.3% drop in their combined capex plans, down from the 8.1% fall projected three months earlier.
Among other key surveys closely monitored by BOJ officials, the monthly Economy Watchers Survey, which was conducted by the Cabinet Office from June 25 to June 30 and released on July 8, indicated that confidence continued to improve, thanks to easing in Mideast tensions as well as robust spending by visitors from overseas taking advantage of the weak yen and by affluent domestic consumers amid rising stock prices. There is also solid demand for semiconductors and air conditioners.
The Watchers’ sentiment index showing the direction of Japan’s current economic climate rose slightly to a four-month high of 44.0 in June on a seasonally adjusted basis, posting the second straight rise after rising to 43.6 in May from 40.8% in April. Before the impact of the Iran war emerged, the index climbed to a nearly two-year high of 48.9 in February from 47.6 in January. The last time the index was above the neutral line of 50 was in March 2024, when it was at 50.1.
The Watchers’ outlook index, which shows sentiment in two to three months, marked the third straight increase, rising to 45.7 in June from 40.7 in May and 39.4 in April. The index started the year at 50.1 before slipping to 50.0 in February and plunging to 38.7 in March.
Wednesday, July 15
0850 JST (2350 GMT/1950 EDT Tuesday, July 14) The Cabinet Office releases May machinery orders.
Mace News median: core orders -5.0% m/m (range: -6.5% to -0.7%) vs. April +8.7%; +13.7% y/y (range: +12.2% to +16.6%) vs. April +15.6
Japan’s core machinery orders, a key leading indicator of business investment in equipment and software, are forecast to slip back 5.0% on the month in May after posting an unexpected rebound in April with a sharp 8.7% gain and slumping 9.4% in March. But the data is also likely to show persistent domestic demand for computers, reflecting the need to digitize operations to cope with labor shortages, as well as strong demand for equipment to produce memory chips amid the global move to build artificial intelligence data centers.
Last month, the Cabinet Office maintained its assessment that machinery orders are “showing signs of a pickup.” The three-month moving average rose 3.7% in April after slipping 0.9% in March rising 7.5% previously.
Thursday, July 16
1330 JST (0430 GMT/0030 EDT Thursday, July 16) The Bank of Japan releases the quarterly survey on consumer sentiment, inflation outlook.
In the March quarter survey conducted from Feb. 4 to March 9, the consumer confidence index continued to improve to a two-year high of -45.5 from -50.4 in December and -58.7 in September, although just over a half of respondents still said things were worse than a year earlier. By contrast, the index showing sentiment a year ahead dipped slightly to -18.5 after picking up sharply to -18.3 from -40.2. The Iran war broke out in late February, triggering a spike in global energy prices in March.
On the inflation outlook for 12 months ahead, the share of those who projected that prices would rise declined to 83.7% of the respondents in March from 86.0% in December and 88.0% in September. The median of the projected inflation rate was 10.0%, unchanged from the previous two quarters. In the face of elevated costs for essential goods, consumers have felt much higher inflation than the consumer price index shows. As for inflation five years ahead, the share of those who forecast higher prices fell slightly to 82.6% after shrinking at a faster pace to 83.0% from 84.8%.
Friday, July 17
– The Diet’s special 150-day session is scheduled to end. Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi called a snap election in January for a Feb. 8 vote, delaying the start of what is usually called an ordinary 150-day session for about a month. Some opposition parties are calling for an extension of the assembly to allow more debate time.
–Hot Weather, Rising Stock Markets Seen Lifting Retail Sales in May, Job Creation Continues, Factory Output to Extend Monthly Gain on Export Demand By Max
By Chikafumi Hodo TOKYO (MaceNews) – Tokyo’s consumer price index, a leading indicator of the national inflation trend, is expected to accelerate in June, reflecting
By Denny Gulino WASHINGTON (MaceNews) – For any reporter covering Alan Greenspan there was a reliable imperative, read the text of his latest speech very
By Laurie Laird LONDON (MaceNews) – UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer resigned as leader of the Labour Party early on Monday, bringing an end to
–Updates to Show New Date for Monthly Economic Report –June Tokyo CPI Inflation Seen Accelerating on Rising Costs for Plastics, Other Goods amid Mideast Materials
— SEP Shows Fed Officials See Funds Rate Rising To 3.8% By End ‘26; Back to 3.6% end ’27 – -SEP Inflation Forecast Lifted for
WASHINGTON (MaceNews) – The following is a rough transcript of the responses of the new Federal Reserve chair, Kevin Warsh, to reporters’ questions in his
WASHINGTON (MaceNews) – The drastically abbreviated Federal Open Market policy statement follows, containing no forward guidance, no dissents, no rate change and which drops easing
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.
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