Fed Points Toward a Pause in May Once Hikes Have Time to Sink In

Federal Reserve officials are on track to consider pausing interest rate hikes following their March meeting if more evidence of cooling inflation rolls in.

That’s based on a timeline sketched out by one of the Fed’s most closely watched hawks, Governor Christopher Waller, who was an early advocate of the Fed’s front-loading rate-hike strategy last year.

Policymakers are widely expected to raise rates by a quarter percentage point at the conclusion of a two-day gathering Wednesday, to a range of 4.5% to 4.75%, slowing from December’s 50-basis-point increase after four straight 75-basis-point moves.

Fed officials projected in December that they would pause when rates move above 5%, but Wall Street traders bet they will halt slightly below that level.

US central bankers have said that October, November and December inflation data, which all showed steady declines in price increases, was welcome news but they still need to see more.

Waller, in recent comments, spelled out how much more evidence he needed to call a halt.

“The argument is just whether you should pause after three months of data or pause after six months of data,” Waller said on Jan. 20. “From the risk management side — I need six months of data, not just three.”