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New Policy Report: Fed has Bad News for Congress

Original Analysis | SchiffGold | 24 Jun, 2025

In a report released on Friday, the Fed provided a monetary policy update to congress, highlighting its perspective on keeping rates constant and its outlook on the future of the economy. The report comes after the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) kept its federal-funds-rate target locked at 4¼ %–4½ % for a sixth straight meeting on June 18th, insisting it is “well positioned to wait for more clarity on the outlook for inflation and economic activity.” Investors, however, are reading the pause as a prelude: futures now price in more than 100 basis points of easing by the end of 2026, pinning the effective rate near 3.3 %. The disconnect between the Fed’s studious patience and Wall Street’s conviction helped propel spot gold to a fresh record of $3,372 an ounce on Friday, reinforcing the sense that hard assets remain in vogue even after two years of nominal “tightening.”

To be sure, consumer inflation has cooled from last year’s peaks, yet it still overshoots the target. Headline PCE (personal-consumption-expenditures) prices rose 2.1 % in the 12 months to April, while the stickier core gauge clocked in at 2.5 %. Real-world anxieties persist. Household and business sentiment indices have rolled over this year amid worries that the White House’s new tariff package will rekindle price pressures just as hiring slows. Non-farm payrolls are averaging only 124,000 new jobs a month, and the unemployment rate has been stuck at 4.2 % since February—hardly crisis territory, but notably higher than last summer.

Growth is wobbling as well. First-quarter real GDP contracted at an annualized –0.2 %, dragged under by a 43 % surge in imports placed ahead of the tariff hikes. Fed staff noted the buying binge swelled the trade gap to 5.2 % of GDP and likely understated output because inventories were under-counted, yet even so, private-domestic final demand managed a respectable 2.5 % gain. The mixed picture leaves policymakers in a bind: press harder and risk a recession, or loosen prematurely and court another inflation flare-up.

Federal Reserve gold inflation interest rates monetary policy