Fed holds rates at 3.50%-3.75%; four dissent in split decision
Original: Fed holds rates steady but with highest level of dissent since 1992 View original →
The Federal Open Market Committee left the federal funds target range unchanged at 3.50%-3.75% on April 29, a hold that was less important than the vote split behind it. In the official statement, the Fed said economic activity was still expanding at a solid pace, job gains had remained low on average and inflation was elevated partly because of recent global energy-price increases. CNBC's source story framed the decision as the widest dissent since 1992, and the official vote tally showed why: one governor wanted a 25 bps cut, while three others backed keeping rates where they are but objected to the easing bias in the statement.
That combination matters for markets. The policy rate did not move, but the Committee signaled that the path to cuts is no longer a simple inflation-down, rates-down story. The statement kept language that it will consider the extent and timing of additional adjustments, yet four dissenting votes exposed two competing pressures inside the Fed. One camp is already ready to ease. Another is willing to hold the rate range but does not want the market to assume cuts are the default next step.
The Fed also tied its caution directly to geopolitics. In the statement, officials said "Inflation is elevated, in part reflecting the recent increase in global energy prices." The implementation note kept the primary credit rate at 3.75%, reinforcing that the operating framework itself did not change. For bond traders, that means the signal came from guidance and dissents, not from a technical adjustment to the corridor.
What matters next is whether the energy shock stays confined to gasoline and transport costs or bleeds into broader inflation expectations. The next round of labor-market, CPI and spending data will test that quickly. A clean disinflation trend would strengthen the case of the lone dove. Sticky energy pass-through would do the opposite and give the anti-bias dissenters more weight at the next meeting.
Not investment advice. Verify all figures with primary sources before acting.
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