A top Federal Reserve official said the central bank had more work ahead to bring down inflation, suggesting another interest-rate increase would be warranted at the Fed’s meeting in two weeks. “Inflation is still too high, and we will use our monetary policy tools to restore price stability,” said New York Fed President John Williams in a speech Wednesday night to a group of financial-industry professionals in Manhattan. Investors see a greater than 80% chance that the Fed will raise rates by a quarter point at its May 2-3 meeting, according to CME Group. Mr. Williams, a close ally of Fed Chair Jerome Powell, offered little to push back against those expectations just days before central-bank officials begin their traditional premeeting quiet period when Fed officials don’t communicate publicly before their decision. Fed policy makers raised rates by a quarter-point at each of their two meetings this year, most recently in March, to a range between 4.75% and 5%. The Fed has been trying to slow investment, spending and hiring to combat inflation.
Source: WSJ.com: US Business