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Fed’s Collins says supported rate cut but it was a ‘close call’

By Michael S. Derby

Dec 15 (Reuters) – Federal Reserve Bank of Boston President Susan Collins said Monday a changing inflation outlook tilted her toward ​supporting last week’s central bank interest rate cut.

“I supported last week’s {Federal ‌Open Market Committee) decision to lower the target range for the federal funds rate by ‌25 basis points, although for me, it was a close call,” Collins said in a statement from her bank. “Available information suggested the balance of risks had shifted a bit” and “scenarios with a notable further rise in inflation seem somewhat less ⁠likely.”

Collins weighed in after ‌last week’s move by the Fed to lower its target rate range to between 3.5% and 3.75%, as the officials ‍work to balance ongoing inflation risks and rising softness in the jobs market. The Fed’s decision to cut rates was fractured: two policymakers wanted the Fed to hold steady ​while a third wanted a larger cut than the one policymakers opted ‌for.

Ahead of the Fed meeting, comments made by Collins suggested her inflation concerns would put her in the camp of dissenters against a rate cut. Collins has been consistently worried about too high levels of inflation and the length of time they’ve been above the Fed’s target.

Collins’ unexpected dovishness did ⁠not translate into a new outlook for monetary ​policy.

“It was important to me that the ​forward guidance in the Committee’s statement now echoes language in the December 2024 statement, which preceded a pause in cutting rates,” ‍the official noted.

“Given a ⁠policy stance that is at the lower end of a range I view as mildly restrictive, I would want greater clarity about the ⁠inflation picture before adjusting policy further, to ensure a timely return of inflation to the ‌Committee’s 2 percent objective,” she said.

(Reporting by Michael S. Derby; Editing ‌by Andrea Ricci and Chizu Nomiyama )

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