Why the Fed's dot plot doesn't matter to this economist

Coming out of the March FOMC meeting, US Federal Reserve officials have opted to hold interest rates at their current levels, maintaining hope for three rate cuts in 2024. While finding the Fed's dot plot "boring," Sahm Consulting Founder Claudia Sahm critiques the dot plot in its mischaracterization of certain sentiments from "the entire FOMC for the day."

Sahm, a former Federal Reserve Board Economist, also tells Yahoo Finance her thoughts on the Fed's inflation outlook:
"I agree with their trajectory. Inflation is coming down. We're likely going to learn at the end of this month that PC core inflation was 2.8%, or something right around there. It has been steadily coming down. Yes, the last two months on inflation have been disappointing — so have the last two months on retail sales... We really have gotten a mixed bag of disappointing news out of the gate. I think they're right, it's going to be a little slower. It's been a slog getting inflation down..."

For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Yahoo Finance Live.

Editor's note: This article was written by Luke Carberry Mogan.

Video Transcript

JOSH LIPTON: Claudia, it is good to see you. So zero confidence in the dot plot, Claudia. Walk us through that. How come?

CLAUDIA SAHM: It's not a useful tool for communication. There was so much attention today is the media going to be three cuts or two cuts. And markets could have moved, if it switched.

I mean, two people would have had to change their forecasts. And I think what we forget is the dot plot, the median, in particular. It is not the consensus forecast for the FOMC.

You have 19 people running off doing their own projections and then doing their appropriate policy. It's a neat little exercise. It's fine for in the building.

It should not be out in public. And thank goodness, Jay Powell definitely kept it together. This is a boring dot plot, and this is a boring statement. Yay. Good. We need more data before we get excited.

JULIE HYMAN: And it's funny, Claudia, about the dot plots because we talked to Andrew Levin a little bit earlier who said he was one of the guys who helped them construct it in the first place. And even he is saying, maybe we need to rethink this situation. So do you think that the Fed does need some type of publicly facing forecasting tool like this? Or do you think, no, they should just get rid of it and bring it back into the meeting rooms? And that's it.

CLAUDIA SAHM: They need Jay Powell at the press conference. That's it. He can give the message across and get like that. He speaks for the FOMC.