The Federal Reserve chair told reporters the FOMC dropped forward guidance from its policy statement because members judged it not well suited to current conditions. The chair said some officials still see a role for guidance, but the committee agreed to send communications practices to a task force for review.
On the dot plot — the distribution of participants’ rate projections — the chair said many submissions appeared tentative and were made "with pencils," and he did not submit a dot of his own. He said the dot plot should not be treated as a binding pledge and that communications policy (including the use of dots, press conferences and transcripts) will be evaluated by the communications task force.
The chair described the data task force as exploring private‑sector, real‑time data and methodological changes to improve official statistics, reduce revision risk, and give policymakers more contemporary indicators. He said some official statistics use survey methods and revision schedules that may not reflect the modern economy and that new analytic techniques, including those enabled by AI, could provide more actionable information for policy.
Reporters asked whether dropping forward guidance would increase market volatility. The chair said markets function best reacting to incoming data and market prices, which in turn provide useful information to policymakers. He emphasized that future policy decisions will be guided by incoming data and pledged not to offer specific forward guidance at this time.
The chair reiterated the committee will meet in six weeks and that communication‑framework outcomes might be announced as processes conclude.