Editorial Board

Amid Mounting Risks, the Fed Wisely Puts Rates on Hold

What’s a Fed chair supposed to do?

Photographer: Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

Much as expected, the Federal Reserve left its policy rate unchanged last week, stressing new uncertainties in the economic outlook and the limits of monetary policy in managing them. This was the right call: If ever there was a time for a central bank to wait and see before altering interest rates, it’s now.

Accordingly, the Fed’s new economic projections, closely watched by investors for clues on where things are headed, had no surprises about policy in the short term: They point — tentatively — to another quarter-point cut in the short-term rate this year followed by one more in 2027. In other ways, though, the summary did shift, and in potentially consequential ways.