Investing.com – Markets and the economy alike are awaiting direction after comments from new Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh and fresh U.S. employment data this week, according to analysts at Barclays.
Speaking at a panel with other central bankers in Sintra, Portugal on Wednesday, Warsh, who has outlined plans to overhaul the Fed’s communication strategy, stressed that he would not provide investors with forward guidance on interest rates. This placed added emphasis on his views of the wider economy, with Warsh stating that he believed inflation risks in particular had begun to come down.
“Warsh’s remarks at Sintra provided no clues about how policy might respond to data just as the economy approaches a critical juncture,” the Barclays analysts including Jonathan Millar and Marc Giannoni said in a note.
A day after Warsh’s appearance, new figures showed that the U.S. economy added fewer jobs than anticipated in June, while the unemployment rate edged lower as labor force participation ebbed. Although the employment picture in the U.S. displayed some signs of ongoing resilience, the report pointed to a “moderation” in the labor market possibly linked to slower immigration and wider labor supply constraints, the Barclays analysts said.
Taken together, the two developments this week failed to settle the debate around the Fed’s rate trajectory. Bets that the central bank will roll out an imminent rate hike eased in the wake of the U.S. jobs report on Thursday, but investors still see some potential for an increase by the end of the year.
In theory, raising rates can help to corral energy-fueled inflation pressures, albeit at the risk of weighing on the labor market and broader economy. At its June meeting, the Fed kept rates steady at a range of 3.5% to 3.75%, but new projections indicated that officials anticipated a hike sometime in 2026.
“Our baseline remains an extended hold in policy rates, conditional on inflation, activity, and labor market conditions moderating through the summer,” the Barclays analysts wrote. “The principal risk is that gains in employment and spending re-accelerate while labor supply remains constrained, keeping inflation pressures elevated and placing hikes on the table.”
