The Prague Post - US Fed expected to hold rates steady as Iran war roils outlook

EUR -
AED 4.325271
AFN 75.953424
ALL 95.532572
AMD 440.587255
ANG 2.107656
AOA 1080.979222
ARS 1594.988005
AUD 1.64303
AWG 2.119567
AZN 2.040852
BAM 1.954003
BBD 2.370421
BDT 144.697577
BGN 1.964252
BHD 0.444265
BIF 3492.575795
BMD 1.177537
BND 1.49703
BOB 8.132523
BRL 5.89876
BSD 1.176918
BTN 109.812503
BWP 15.790549
BYN 3.350619
BYR 23079.732159
BZD 2.367034
CAD 1.615027
CDF 2715.400932
CHF 0.923195
CLF 0.026527
CLP 1043.92183
CNY 8.032629
CNH 8.034343
COP 4260.706962
CRC 538.904523
CUC 1.177537
CUP 31.20474
CVE 110.512152
CZK 24.333929
DJF 209.577312
DKK 7.472946
DOP 70.652394
DZD 155.579789
EGP 61.008567
ERN 17.66306
ETB 183.764244
FJD 2.608714
FKP 0.867819
GBP 0.870489
GEL 3.167711
GGP 0.867819
GHS 13.017661
GIP 0.867819
GMD 85.960069
GNF 10338.778395
GTQ 9.000725
GYD 246.2436
HKD 9.214877
HNL 31.265254
HRK 7.534945
HTG 154.048366
HUF 364.966286
IDR 20200.888833
ILS 3.529232
IMP 0.867819
INR 109.706151
IQD 1541.782463
IRR 1555526.845789
ISK 143.989047
JEP 0.867819
JMD 185.849128
JOD 0.834844
JPY 187.511636
KES 152.138272
KGS 102.976208
KHR 4718.681612
KMF 492.210274
KPW 1059.795126
KRW 1741.195062
KWD 0.363223
KYD 0.980802
KZT 555.12197
LAK 25966.126366
LBP 105391.901153
LKR 371.728228
LRD 216.5509
LSL 19.301536
LTL 3.476962
LVL 0.712281
LYD 7.444187
MAD 10.875647
MDL 20.113593
MGA 4886.507274
MKD 61.667642
MMK 2473.25999
MNT 4228.819162
MOP 9.487277
MRU 46.864111
MUR 54.413992
MVR 18.19252
MWK 2044.775293
MXN 20.348469
MYR 4.655997
MZN 75.309373
NAD 19.301454
NGN 1580.255028
NIO 43.31018
NOK 11.04509
NPR 175.699459
NZD 1.998652
OMR 0.452778
PAB 1.176918
PEN 4.049177
PGK 5.100332
PHP 70.659296
PKR 328.209539
PLN 4.238846
PYG 7502.102458
QAR 4.290619
RON 5.098504
RSD 117.354537
RUB 89.942407
RWF 1723.622595
SAR 4.417284
SBD 9.477507
SCR 16.09848
SDG 707.700068
SEK 10.816647
SGD 1.498787
SHP 0.879151
SLE 29.026421
SLL 24692.365052
SOS 672.584472
SRD 44.160017
STD 24372.645811
STN 24.477495
SVC 10.297576
SYP 130.149868
SZL 19.297258
THB 37.698855
TJS 11.162984
TMT 4.127268
TND 3.417658
TOP 2.835228
TRY 52.711571
TTD 7.99465
TWD 37.170735
TZS 3070.411922
UAH 51.423139
UGX 4349.001465
USD 1.177537
UYU 46.977008
UZS 14316.897628
VES 562.842684
VND 31008.679939
VUV 139.500866
WST 3.198133
XAF 655.357238
XAG 0.014934
XAU 0.000245
XCD 3.182353
XCG 2.121059
XDR 0.813639
XOF 655.348897
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.963467
ZAR 19.343348
ZMK 10599.245112
ZMW 22.508306
ZWL 379.166548
  • RYCEF

    -0.8000

    16.8

    -4.76%

  • CMSC

    -0.0800

    22.63

    -0.35%

  • BTI

    -0.4350

    56.245

    -0.77%

  • BCE

    0.3250

    24.145

    +1.35%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • NGG

    -0.6400

    87.22

    -0.73%

  • GSK

    -0.4700

    57.34

    -0.82%

  • RIO

    1.1300

    99.69

    +1.13%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    23.03

    0%

  • VOD

    0.1000

    15.69

    +0.64%

  • RELX

    0.7450

    36.425

    +2.05%

  • JRI

    -0.0100

    12.87

    -0.08%

  • BP

    1.6500

    47.77

    +3.45%

  • BCC

    0.1100

    79.02

    +0.14%

  • AZN

    -0.5650

    200.645

    -0.28%

US Fed expected to hold rates steady as Iran war roils outlook
US Fed expected to hold rates steady as Iran war roils outlook / Photo: - - AFP

US Fed expected to hold rates steady as Iran war roils outlook

US Federal Reserve policymakers are expected to leave interest rates unchanged at their meeting next week, as the US-Israel war on Iran sends shock waves through markets and recent economic data has begun to show weakness.

Text size:

The Fed will start its two-day meeting on Tuesday, with an announcement of the benchmark lending rate in the world's largest economy a day later.

The central bank cut rates three consecutive times last year before holding them steady at its January meeting.

It has a dual mandate of holding inflation near a long-term target of two percent while ensuring maximum employment.

With war in the Middle East causing global oil prices to spike, potentially increasing overall inflation and curbing growth, analysts say policymakers are unlikely to make any moves now.

"This is certainly a bind for the Fed, because supply shocks are extremely hard to deal with in that they lift inflation and they curb output," EY-Parthenon chief economist Gregory Daco told AFP.

Affordability is a key political issue for President Donald Trump, who has claimed that prices are cooling even as consumers complain of the high costs of basic goods.

Trump has repeatedly insulted Fed Chair Jerome Powell as he demands lower rates, and the Justice Department threatened Powell with a criminal indictment as part of an investigation into cost overruns for a Fed renovation project.

While consumer inflation has dropped from a peak of 9.1 percent during the Covid pandemic, it remains well above the Fed's two- percent target.

"Unlike other countries, which have already achieved some level of price stability, we're five years in without price stability," said Diane Swonk, chief economist at KPMG.

She warned that, depending on how long the Iran war lasts, inflation could again soar past four percent.

"I think the main story here is that we are seeing inflation moving away from the Fed's two-percent target, and that will lead many Fed policymakers to adopt an even more hawkish stance," said Daco.

- Duelling mandates -

Raising rates to cool the economy, however, could bring the Fed into tension with its other mandate: managing unemployment.

The United States unexpectedly lost 92,000 jobs in February, government data showed, while the unemployment rate rose to 4.4 percent.

Analysts say a relatively steady unemployment rate has been masking churn beneath the surface.

Labor demand has been dropping, but unemployment has not spiked because that has been accompanied by a drop in supply due to Trump's immigration crackdown.

Daco said labor demand gauges were showing signs of concern, including a weak hiring rate "at a decade low," slowing wage growth and business leaders talking about labor replacement due to AI.

Swonk noted that spiking uncertainty due to war in Iran and its knock-on effects would further curb labor demand.

"Uncertainty acts as its own tax on the economy, and one of the first lines of defense that firms do is they freeze hiring," she said.

And recent data ahead of the Fed meeting is not encouraging, with US GDP growth revised sharply lower in the final months of 2025.

- 'Rock and a hard place' -

Some Fed policymakers, however, have been cautious in describing the possible inflationary shocks of the war.

Fed Governor Christopher Waller expressed sympathy on Bloomberg TV last week for consumers facing spiking gasoline prices.

"But for us thinking about policy going forward, this is unlikely to cause sustained inflation," he said.

Swonk warned however that any economic slowdown from the war could be tough to recover from in the immediate term.

"I think people are discounting the risk of the lingering effects," she said, noting that supply disruptions affect more than oil prices.

"There's no question they're between a rock and a hard spot, and it just got harder," Swonk said of policymakers having to balance inflation and unemployment.

To Daco, however, uncertainty means the Fed is more likely to hold rates steady "for a long period of time."

Traders have begun to reduce their outlook for rate cuts, and Swonk said that hikes could even be on the menu.

"This is not a one-way street. We're at a busy intersection, and the stoplight's broken," she said.

B.Svoboda--TPP