The US Federal Reserve has held interest rates steady but stiffened its hawkish stance, with a further rate increase projected by the end of the year and monetary policy kept significantly tighter through 2024 than previously expected.
As they did in June, Fed policymakers at the median still expect the US central bank's benchmark overnight interest rate to peak this year in the 5.50 per cent-5.75 per cent range, just a quarter of a percentage point above the current range.
But from there the Fed's updated quarterly projections show rates falling only half a percentage point in 2024 compared to the full percentage point of cuts anticipated at the meeting in June.
With the federal funds rate falling to 5.1 per cent by the end of 2024 and 3.9 per cent by the end of 2025, the central bank's main measure of inflation is projected to drop to 3.3 per cent by the end of this year, to 2.5 per cent next year and to 2.2 per cent by the end of 2025.
"Inflation remains elevated," the rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) said in a policy statement that included projections incorporating stronger economic and job growth than prior forecasts, and keeping prospects for a "soft landing" squarely in view.
Financial markets had widely expected that the Fed would leave rates unchanged.
But investors have also been banking on significant Fed rate cuts next year, an expectation clouded by the projections showing 10 of 19 officials see the policy rate remaining above 5.0 per cent through next year.
The new projections include a substantial mark-up of projections for economic growth: after expecting growth as weak as 0.4 per cent for this year in earlier projections, the Fed now expects the economy to grow 2.1 per cent in 2023.
The unemployment rate is also seen remaining steady at about 3.8 per cent this year and rising to just 4.1 per cent by year's end - a vote of confidence in the possibility of containing the worst breakout of US inflation since the 1980s without significant job losses.
But the projections also threaten companies and households with the possibility of even tighter credit conditions and higher borrowing costs than they have already absorbed during the Fed's aggressive two-year battle to contain inflation, embodying a philosophy of "higher for longer" into the latest projections.
The Fed statement was approved unanimously after a two-day meeting that marked new Fed Governor Adriana Kugler's debut on the central bank policymaking stage.