Federal Reserve holds steady as inflation fears mount - podcast episode cover

Federal Reserve holds steady as inflation fears mount

Mar 19, 202612 min
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Summary

The Federal Reserve held interest rates steady and signaled future cuts despite inflation concerns, with Chair Jay Powell also addressing an ongoing investigation. The US relaxed sanctions on Venezuela's state oil group, aiming to boost global oil supply amidst the Iran War. Additionally, Walmart secured patents for algorithms to implement dynamic pricing, and a temporary ceasefire was brokered between Pakistan and Afghanistan following a deadly hospital attack.

Episode description

The US has relaxed sanctions on Venezuela’s state-owned oil group Petróleos de Venezuela and the Federal Reserve has stuck with plans to cut rates later this year. Plus, Walmart won patents to give algorithms more sway over prices and fears of an immediate escalation in the conflict between Afghanistan and Pakistan have eased.


Mentioned in this podcast:

Federal Reserve chief Jay Powell says Iran oil crisis will worsen US inflation

Pakistan and Afghanistan pause hostilities after Kabul hospital attack

Walmart wins patents to give algorithms more sway over prices

US relaxes sanctions on Venezuela’s PDVSA amid global energy squeeze

Send us your tariff story: marc.filippino@ft.com

Credit: Federal Reserve


Note: The FT does not use generative AI to voice its podcasts 


Today’s FT News Briefing was hosted by Sonja Hutson, and produced by Fiona Symon and Victoria Craig. Our show was mixed by Kelly Garry. Additional help from David da Silva. Our executive producer is Topher Forhecz. Cheryl Brumley is the FT’s Global Head of Audio. The show’s theme music is by Metaphor Music.


Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com

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Transcript

Intro / Opening

Markets move fast. Get the insights you need in 10 minutes with Barclays Brief, a podcast from Barclays Investment Bank. Each week our experts analyze market themes, helping you anticipate what's next. Listen to Barclays Brief wherever you get your podcasts. Good morning from the Financial Times. Today is Thursday, March 19th, and this is your FT News briefing.

US Eases Venezuela Oil Sanctions

Venezuelan oil now has an easier path to the global market, and the Fed is staying the course. Plus, the fallout between Pakistan and the Taliban is having deadly consequences. We saw a particularly deadly episode in Monday that showing that civilians are not being spared from this kind of violence. I'm Sonia Hudson, and here's the news you need to start your day.

The US relaxed sanctions on Venezuela's state-owned oil group yesterday. Pedavesa will now be allowed to sell oil directly to US companies and on the global market. But payments must be sent to US controlled accounts. The move comes as the Trump administration wants to open up Venezuela's oil sector. The US abducted and arrested socialist leader Nicholas Maduro back in January.

The administration is also looking to alleviate some of the crunch on the global oil market that was caused by the Iran War. But experts have warned it could take years to revitalize Venezuela's oil sector, and big international energy companies seem skeptical about investing in the country.

Federal Reserve Holds Rates Steady

The Federal Reserve is sticking to its plan despite a huge surge in energy prices from the war in Iran. It held rates steady at its meeting yesterday and signaled that it expected to make a quarter point cut by the end of the year. Here's Chair Jay Powell explaining why.

This normalization of our policy stance should continue to help stabilize the labor market while allowing inflation to resume its downward trend toward two percent. But the implications of events in the Middle East for the US economy are uncertain. Here to decode the Fed Speak is the FT's US economics editor, Claire Jones. Hi Claire. Hi, Sonya.

So tell us more about what Powell was saying in that clip that we just heard. Why did the Federal Reserve hold rates and signal that they're gonna cut later this year? We've seen oil prices soar, but yesterday we heard the world most important central bank say they expect interest rates to end the year lower than they are now. Now, that might surprise some because lower borrowing costs usually contribute to higher inflation. So what's the Fed up to here? Well

There's a lot of things going on in the US economy besides the war. The labor market is weakening, and the impact of the war on oil prices may still be quite short-lived. Then we could get a cut later this year once oil prices return to the sorts of levels they were at. before the Iran war began. Mm. Yeah, but still lots of uncertainty about when that will happen.

We also got some other economic projections from the Fed in what we call the dot plot, which is a very exciting graph for us monetary policy nerds. Um, what else did we learn from that? What we saw from that was that even though officials are expecting to cut borrowing costs once this year, they also raise their expectations for inflation and also a little bit for growth too.

A lot of questions were asked, you know, how can you assume there's going to be high inflation when you're also assuming you're going to cut interest rates? But the Fed churred Jay Powell's reply to that was to stress that we're in very uncertain times. Officials really don't know what's gonna happen. But their best guess is that there'll be some short term impact on inflation, but right now there's nothing to suggest it's gonna have an enduring effect should the conflict end soon.

So Claire, Powell also touched on some other uncertainties around the Fed. Um, one of which is the federal investigation into him surrounding the cost of renovations of the Federal Reserve building. I have no intention of leaving the board until the investigation is well and truly over with transparency and finality. And his term as chair is up in May. Um, but his successor has run into some problems getting confirmed, right? Exactly. So Kevin Walsh, who's Trump's pick, to succeed Powell.

Will struggle to get confirmed while the probe into Powell is ongoing. A lot of senators, including Republicans, have said. They've got no problems with Walsh personally, but they're not gonna back him while the Powell probe is still ongoing. Powell confirmed yesterday that if that scenario goes ahead And the process of confirming Walsh goes beyond mid May, he will stay on at the Fed as chair. And he can remain as a governor, though not necessarily chair, until january twenty twenty eight.

Claire Jones is the FTU's US economics editor. Thanks, Claire. Thanks, Sonia.

Walmart Explores Dynamic Pricing

Walmart has entered the debate on dynamic pricing. Prices that change in response to supply and demand are most commonly found in airfare and ride sharing. But the retail giant recently won patents that will give algorithms more sway over the cost of goods. Walmart said the patents are quote unrelated to dynamic pricing and that it doesn't participate in surge pricing.

A patent issued in January is specifically for, quote, dynamically and automatically changing item prices to carry out markdowns in its e-commerce unit. The new patents come as Walmart is installing electronic shelf labels in all of its forty six hundred US stores over the next year. But critics of the technology say it could be used to mislead customers by changing prices too often or in confusing ways.

Pakistan-Afghanistan Conflict Pauses

Pakistan and Afghanistan agreed to a temporary pause in hostilities yesterday. The agreement was struck days after an airstrike on a hospital in Afghanistan Monday that killed hundreds of people. The Taliban blamed Pakistan, which denied it was behind the attack. But the incident was a dramatic escalation. There's been a weeks-long cross-border conflict between the two sides that were once allied.

The FT's Hamza Jalani has been covering the conflict and he joins me now. Hi, Hamza. Hi. Great to be here. Great to have you. So what do we know about the attack on the hospital in Kabul? while on monday night There was a very large explosion at a facility that

serves drug addicts in the capital of Afghanistan, Kabul. It was part of the Taliban's initiative to try and get drug users off the streets and what they say is help them get treatment But around nine PM, shortly after the last night prayer, large sections of the facility were destroyed in an apparent Pakistani airstrike.

Now the Taliban officials have claimed that about four hundred people were killed. Um the UN, for example, has not shared a specific casualty number but has said that Pakistan was responsible for the strike. Pakistan denies targeting the hospital but does say that it was conducting airstrikes over Kabul against what it calls military facilities that were helping to provide ammunition or training to militant groups operating in Pakistan. And what got the two countries to this point?

Well, ever since the Taliban came to power in twenty twenty one, there was a very short lived honeymoon with their former backers in Pakistan feeling very happy to have their ally in power and that has absolutely nosedive in recent years because Pakistan has lost about four thousand people.

to militancy, specifically a Pakistani version of the Taliban called the Tariqi Taliban Pakistan and separatist groups in Balochistan who Pakistan say receive safe haven financing weapons and other kinds of support. from the Taliban government in Afghanistan. Pakistan has decided that enough is enough and that they wanted to take the fight directly to Afghanistan and put pressure on the Taliban to reign in these groups.

And in this February, the Defense Minister of Pakistan Khwaja Asif declared open war against the Afghan Taliban, saying that the time for diplomacy had ended. So Hamza, how bad could this conflict get and how damaging is it for both sides? Well it's already been quite devastating. I mean, even before the horrific attack on the drug facility, eighty eight civilians had been killed and over a hundred thousand have been displaced in cross border firing and airstrikes and artillery fire.

And the border between the two countries, which is twenty six hundred kilometers long, is the economic lifeline to Afghanistan and to border communities in Pakistan. Afghanistan, of course, is landlocked. That has been closed uh since October, which is having a big economic impact on both sides of the border, but particularly in Afghanistan, which relies on Pakistan for its many of its food imports or for key inputs to housing and to industry.

So people already suffering, but it could get much worse. We saw a particularly deadly episode in Monday that showing that civilians are not being spared from this kind of violence and Afghanistan has been battered by four decades of war and people fear that it could be going back to another war, this time with Pakistan. Now, regional neighbors have helped broker this short ceasefire. Is there pressure though for a longer lasting agreement?

Well, after the attack on Monday, what we've seen is many of Pakistan's allies, including China, reiterating their calls for immediate peace. There's been condemnations pouring in from the European Union.

from Iran, from other kinds of countries that see themselves as close to both sides or see a stake in having stability in the region, for countries like China or Qatar and Saudi Arabia, the last thing they want is another war on Iran's doorstep at the same time that US and Israel are waging a war on Iran.

But it's very unclear how things could change from here because Pakistan says the red line is the level of militant violence that they're facing from Afghan soil and that's not abated enough to make Pakistan happy and they feel like they need to take matters into their own hands. Hamza Jelani is the FT's Pakistan correspondent. Thanks, Hamza. Thank you. Before we go, are you a business owner who's been impacted by Donald Trump's tariffs? If you are, we want to hear from you.

Send us a voice memo with your name, where you're from, and how you've dealt with the tariffs. And we might even play it on the show. You can find the email address in the show notes. This has been your daily FT News briefing. Check back tomorrow for the latest business news. byggd för små företag. Är 100% digital. som 40 000 andra småföretag och välj när. Jurist, kemist eller reservdelspecialist. Tillsammans skapar vi ett hem.

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