Federal Reserve March meeting: Rates hold steady; 3 cuts seen in '24 despite inflation

WASHINGTON--The Federal Reserve left its key interest rate unchanged again Wednesday and stuck to its forecast of three rate cuts this year despite signs that inflation may stay elevated longer.

Fed officials also bumped up their estimates of economic growth and inflation in 2024.

The decision leaves the Fed’s benchmark short-term rate at a 23-year high of 5.25% to 5.5% for a fifth straight meeting. After hiking the rate from near zero since March 2022 to wrestle down high inflation, the central bank has stood pat since July as consumer price increases moderated substantially.

Wednesday’s move means Americans will keep paying higher borrowing costs for now as the Fed battles to slow sharp price increases.

In a statement after a two-day meeting, the Fed repeated that it “does not expect it will be appropriate to reduce the target range until it has gained greater confidence that inflation (now close to 3%) is moving sustainably toward” the Fed’s 2% goal.

What's ahead for homebuyers? Mortgage rates at a 'new normal' of 6%.

How much will interest rates drop?

While inflation has eased more slowly early this year, Fed officials maintained their projection that they’ll lower the federal funds rate by three-quarters of a percentage point to a range of 4.5% to 4.75% by year’s end, according to their median estimate. That’s equivalent to three quarter-point rate cuts, an outlook that could further bolster a stock market that has hit new records since fall on the prospect of lower rates.

At a news conference, Fed Chair Jerome Powell acknowledged that inflation flared in early 2024 after falling dramatically last year. But he said the uptick in January could have been caused by challenges the government faces as it seasonally adjusts the data. The February data was more worrisome, he said, but it appeared to show less of a spike than the previous month.

"The story is really essentially the same of inflation coming down gradually to 2% on a sometimes bumpy path," Powell said. "We're not going to overreact...to the two months of data. Nor are we going to ignore them."

Powell wasn't more specific on when the Fed could start shaving rates except to reiterate that it likely will be "sometimes this year." He noted, however, that besides further progress on inflation, Fed officials also could lower rates "if there's a significant weakening in the labor market."

Futures markets continue to predict three rate decreases this year, with the first coming in June.

Some economists believe the Fed will slice rates more sharply this year in response to both a softening economy and slowing inflation.