From the New York website: The Federal
Reserve may be more likely to raise the benchmark fed-funds rate in its June
meeting than investors have supposed, despite some mixed economic signals.
Three Fed officials known for their mainstream views pushed back this week
against the conventional wisdom – embodied in fed-funds futures contracts –
that the central bank is unlikely to hikes rates at its next meeting, scheduled
for mid-June. “I think that the data to my mind are lining up to make a good case
for rate increases in the next few meetings,” San Francisco Fed President John
Williams told the Wall Street Journal. “Not just June, which means it’s
very live in terms of that.” Atlanta Fed President Dennis Lockhart and Dallas
Fed President Robert Kaplan expressed similar sentiments. “I think markets may
be more pessimistic than certainly I am at this stage,” Mr. Lockhart said. “I
think markets may be more pessimistic than certainly I am at this stage,”
Lockhart told the paper. The markets appeared to be listening. Fed-funds
futures contracts, used by investors to bet on or hedge against Fed moves,
showed that investors Tuesday rated the possibility of an increase at about 15
percent, up from just 4 percent on Monday. [WSJ] – Ariel Stulberg –
Original Content The Real Deal
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