Investing.com -- The Federal Reserve raised interest rates by a quarter-point on Wednesday, signaling the need to put a further squeeze on elevated inflation after skipping a hike last month.
The Federal Open Market Committee, or FOMC, the rate-setting arm of the Fed, raised its benchmark rate to a range of 5.25% to 5.5%.
The return to the rate-hike table followed recent data showing that the economy grew faster than expected in the first quarter; the labor market cooled in June; and inflation slowed more than expected.
"Job gains have been robust in recent months, and the unemployment rate has remained low. Inflation remains elevated," the Fed said in a statement, adding that recent "economic activity has been expanding at a moderate pace."
The most recent reading on the core personal consumption expenditures price index -- which excludes food and energy prices, and is closely watched by the Fed as a more indicative measure of underlying price pressures -- rose by 0.3% in May from 0.4% and slowed to a pace of 4.6% on an annual basis from 4.7% previously.
The big debate - Is disinflation transitory or here to stay?
As inflation continues to trend above the Fed’s 2% target, there is much debate on whether the recent signs of slowing price pressures, or disinflation, can persist, or may prove transitory.
Those in the ‘disinflation is transitory’ camp flag sticky price pressures in the inflation-heavy services sector supported by a still-strong labor market, in which real annual wages are on the up and up for the first time since March 2021, as risks to upside inflation.
“In contrast to the stabilization in goods prices, service price inflation has been much stickier. Manufacturers have seen the peak in their input prices, but service sector businesses continue to deal with higher labor costs,” Jefferies said in a recent note.
Others, however, believe disinflation is here to stay, and will likely force the Fed to downgrade its inflation forecasts.
Core PCE inflation is tracking below its projections, Morgan Stanley said in a recent note, likely leading to a “downgrade in the Fed's inflation forecasts at the September meeting.”
This debate is set to continue in the months ahead, and drive expectations about whether the Fed may follow through on its projections, released in June, for one more hike when it returns from its summer hiatus in September.
For now, the Fed reiterated it remains watchful over incoming economic data to "assess the appropriate stance of monetary policy."
The impact of rate hikes delivered so far on economic activity, inflation, and financial developments, the Fed says, will help determine how much further monetary policy tightening may be required to "return inflation to 2 percent over time."