A senior US central bank official said Friday that the US Federal Reserve is “absolutely” prepared to intervene to help calm nervous financial markets after President Donald Trump’s tariff plans roiled Wall Street.
The US president announced sweeping import taxes on dozens of countries on 2 April only to abruptly and temporarily roll many of them back to 10 percent this week in response to turbulence in the stock and bond markets. This left China with new tariffs totaling 145 percent.
Boston Fed president Susan Collins told the Financial Times in an interview published Friday that the Fed would “absolutely be prepared” to deploy its various tools to help stabilize the financial markets if the need arose.
Any intervention by the Federal Reserve would depend on “what conditions we were seeing,” added Collins, who is one of 12 voting members of the Fed’s all-important rate-setting committee this year.
“The higher the tariffs are, the more the potential slowdown in growth as well as elevation and inflation that one would expect,” Collins said in a separate interview with Yahoo Finance earlier Friday, adding that she expects inflation to rise “well above” three percent this year, but no “significant” economic downturn.
Since Trump’s tariffs came into effect earlier this month, Fed officials have been more outspoken than usual about the effects of the government’s plans on inflation and growth.
Many have also voiced concerns about long-term inflation expectations, which can cause a vicious cycle of price increases if they are not kept in check.
While most countries benefited from the temporary 10n percent rate, higher duties on China kept market concerns elevated, with Morgan Stanley noting tariffs remain historically high, according to Regina Capital Development Corp. managing director Luis Limlingan.
Local stocks extended their gains as investors welcomed the tariff pause, viewing it as a window for renewed trade talks and easing global tensions.
The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas cut its key policy rate by 25 basis points to 5.5 percent and signaled further rate cuts this year amid a more challenging global environment and a more manageable inflation outlook.
A widely referenced consumer sentiment survey published Friday by the University of Michigan noted a sharp drop in consumer confidence and flagged another worrying rise in both short-term and longer-term inflation expectations.
“Year-ahead inflation expectations surged from 5.0 percent last month to 6.7 percent this month, the highest reading since 1981,” the survey noted.
“Long-run inflation expectations climbed from 4.1 percent in March to 4.4 percent in April, reflecting a particularly large jump among independents,” it added.
But for now, the University of Michigan’s survey on inflation expectations remains an outlier, with financial market measures of inflation expectation still largely pricing in a long-term path closer to the Fed’s two percent target.
In a speech in Hot Springs, Arkansas on Friday, St. Louis Fed president Alberto Musalem said “continued vigilance” and “careful monitoring” of the incoming data was needed.
Musalem, a voting member of the Fed’s rate-setting committee this year, said that while he still expects a “moderate” pace of economic expansion, the near-term risks were “skewed” toward rising inflation, slower economic growth and a cooler labor market.
‘The higher the tariffs are, the more the potential slowdown in growth as well as elevation and inflation that one would expect.’
“I would be wary of assuming the impact of high tariffs on inflation would be only brief or limited,” he said.
On a busy day of speeches from central bank officials, New York Fed president John Williams went further than his colleagues on the bank’s rate-setting committee, putting out estimates of how he expects Trump’s immigration and tariff policies — and the uncertainty surrounding them — to affect the US economy this year.
“I now expect real GDP growth will slow considerably from last year’s pace, likely to somewhat below one percent,” he told a conference in Puerto Rico.