| In other words, most believe inflation could go higher and employment could go lower. 
 "The  Fed is worried that the ongoing stagflation shock is going to  intensify  further," Torsten Sløk, chief economist for Apollo, said in a  March 25  note that cited the Summary of Economic Projections data. (Disclosure: Yahoo Finance is owned by Apollo Global Management.)
 
 The Fed has a new favorite word: 'Uncertainty'
 
 
 Jennifer Schonberger   · Senior Reporter
 Thu, March 27, 2025 at 1:00 AM PDT 4 min read
 
 
 There is suddenly a new word that appears again and again in remarks from the Federal Reserve’s top officials: "uncertainty."
 
 It started  last week with  Fed Chair Jerome Powell, who used the word 22 times during March 19  remarks to reporters following the central bank’s decision to leave  rates unchanged.
 
 
 "Uncertainty is remarkably high," Powell said of the US economic outlook.
 
 His colleagues have since spoken from the same script. New York Fed president John Williams  last Friday used the word 12 times while delivering a speech titled "Certain Uncertainty."
 
 This week, Fed governor Adriana Kugler  cited a "heightened level of uncertainty,” while St. Louis Fed president Alberto Musalem  warned about "considerable uncertainty” in determining the effect President Trump’s tariffs will have on inflation.
 
 The certainty of this widespread uncertainty for central bank policymakers was also on full display in the Fed's quarterly  Summary of Economic Projections released last Wednesday — even as officials  maintained a prior prediction for two rate cuts at some point this year.
 
 
 
 
  
 U.S.  Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell attends a press conference,  following a two-day meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee on  interest rate policy, in Washington, D.C., U.S., March 19, 2025.  (REUTERS/Nathan Howard)  · REUTERS / Reuters What Fed officials changed in those projections was their  outlook on inflation (higher) and economic growth (lower), with Powell telling reporters  that a driving reason for the change was uncertainty stemming from Trump's plans for  an aggressive slate of new tariffs.
 
 "It's  hard to know with any precision how the economy will evolve," Williams  said last Friday, acknowledging "there is certain uncertainty in  monetary policy."
 
 Another sign of uncertainty  in the Summary of Economic Projections: Nearly all Fed officials said  that risks to their unemployment forecasts were weighted to the upside  and risks to their inflation forecasts were weighted to the downside.
 
 In other words, most believe inflation could go higher and employment could go lower.
 
 "The  Fed is worried that the ongoing stagflation shock is going to intensify  further," Torsten Sløk, chief economist for Apollo, said in a March 25  note that cited the Summary of Economic Projections data. (Disclosure: Yahoo Finance is owned by Apollo Global Management.)
 
 Fed  policymakers are not the only ones going to the word "uncertainty" to  describe their current predicament. The same is true in the business  world, where companies have started using it when warning about lower  profit and revenue forecasts.
 
 FedEx ( FDX)  did so last week, with its CFO saying its "revised earnings outlook  reflects continued weakness and uncertainty in the U.S. industrial  economy.”
 
 
 Another was Delta Air Lines ( DAL),  which said earlier this month that lower first quarter revenue and  profit forecasts were the result of "increased macro uncertainty."
 
 American  consumers also say they are experiencing increased uncertainty. The  latest consumer confidence index reading from the Conference Board  clocked in at the lowest level in more than four years amid uncertainty  around President Trump's policies.
 
 Expectations  were particularly dour when it came to inflation, with expectations  rising to 6.2% in March, up from 5.8% in February.
 
 
 
 The  hope from the business world and Wall Street is that next week could  provide some clarity when on April 2 Trump releases a promised set of  "reciprocal tariffs" on other countries.
 
 There is even some optimism those tariffs may turn out to be more limited than once expected.
 
 But  for Fed policymakers, that may only lead to another period of  uncertainty as they try to figure out how much of any additional  inflation they expect to see is a one-off effect that will prove to be  temporary.
 
 Powell, for example, said last week that it was his  "base case" that any price increases could prove to be "transitory."
 
 But the St. Louis Fed president, Musalem, said Wednesday that new tariffs could have a more persistent impact on inflation.
 
 "I  would be wary of assuming that the impact of tariff increases on  inflation will be entirely temporary," Musalem said during a speech in  Kentucky.
 
 "The direct price-level effects [of  tariffs] are expected to have only a brief and limited impact on  inflation, but the indirect effects could have a more persistent impact  on inflation," he added.
 
 Musalem offered the  example of beer from Canada. If it is subject to a 25% tariff, US  consumers could shift out of Canadian beer to American-made Budweiser  and then Budweiser could increase its prices as people look for locally  produced goods.
 
 "Distinguishing, especially in  real-time, between direct, indirect, and second-round effects entails  considerable uncertainty," he added.
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