Miran’s Fed dissent makes a splash, fails to sway the outcome

Miran’s Fed dissent makes a splash, fails to sway the outcome

Miran’s Fed dissent makes a splash, fails to sway the outcome

(Reuters) -If President Donald Trump hoped that putting a close ally at the Federal Reserve would grab headlines, White House economic adviser Stephen Miran’s dissent and way-below consensus interest rate projection on Wednesday delivered.

If the hope was to have someone on the inside to get the Fed to lower interest rates as sharply as Trump wants, Miran’s lone dissent was evidence the gambit had failed, at least for now.

Sworn in just before the Fed began its latest meeting, Miran took part in two days of debate and discussion on the state of the economy and where interest rates are best set so as to keep inflation in check while putting the labor market on a better footing.

And on his second day at the central bank, he cast the one vote in favor of a half-of-a-percentage-point rate cut. The other 11 of his voting colleagues – including two other Trump appointees who had dissented only weeks earlier at the previous Fed meeting – voted for a smaller reduction.

His dissent, though nearly as widely anticipated as the quarter-point rate cut itself, guaranteed he was highlighted in all major news coverage of the decision, and every Wall Street analyst note dissecting the move for investors.

But his support for a bigger cut and his submission of a rate-path view that showed he believes another 1.25 percentage points of cuts are warranted by year-end – far more than any other policymaker – fell on deaf ears.

“There wasn’t widespread support at all for a 50-basis-point cut today,” Fed Chair Jerome Powell said in a press conference after the meeting.

Disagreement over the right path for rates, he said, is “understandable and natural,” given the difficulty of navigating between the twin risks of rising inflation and a weakening labor market. But in the end, he said, “we came together today at the meeting and acted with a high degree of unity.”

Many analysts had expected Trump’s two other appointees – Christopher Waller and Michelle Bowman – to join Miran in dissenting. After all, both had dissented in July against the Fed’s decision then to hold rates steady. Instead they went with the majority, closing ranks in effect against the newcomer.

“His 2025 dot at 2.875% is reflective of President Trump’s push for bringing policy rates rapidly back to a more neutral setting,” wrote analysts at TD Securities of Miran’s year-end rate projection on the Fed’s so-called ‘dot plot.’

“Trump appointees Bowman and Waller did not join Miran in supporting a larger rate cut, which in our view reflected a show of support for Fed independence.”