• St. Louis Fed chief sees core inflation stuck near 3% for now due to high oil prices
  • He expects Fed to keep rates steady, with risks on both sides of dual mandate
  • Musalem cites war, tariffs, and immigration as supply shocks
  • He sees economic growth slowing to 1.5%-2% in 2026

WASHINGTON, April 15 (Reuters) - High oil prices are likely to keep underlying inflation nearly a percentage point above the Federal Reserve's 2% target for the rest of this year, with the U.S. central bank likely needing to leave interest rates unchanged, St. Louis Fed President Alberto Musalem said on Wednesday.

"It's likely we're going to see some pass-through of oil prices onto core inflation," with that underlying measure of price increases ending the year "a shade below 3, maybe around 3" percent, versus the Fed's 2% target, Musalem said in a Reuters interview, with risks that it could even be higher.

Musalem said the central bank could leave its policy rate in the current 3.50%-3.75% range "for some time," watching data on inflation, jobs and the economy in coming months, a view shared by many of his colleagues.

While the Fed had been poised to cut rates this year, the outbreak of the war in the Middle East and the subsequent spike in oil prices has shifted the outlook, with investors expecting the Fed to be on an extended pause while monitoring the impact of the conflict.

The Fed sets its 2% inflation target against the Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index, which was increasing at a 2.8% annual rate as of February. The separate "core" measure, however, which is considered a better gauge of future inflation by excluding energy and other volatile commodity-based costs, increased at a faster 3% rate in February and is anticipated to rise to 3.2% in March.

The oil shock, with Brent crude prices still at about $95 a barrel versus around $70 before the start of the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran, has carried over quickly to gasoline prices, but also promises higher shipping and travel costs, and even higher food prices, as fertilizer and similar inputs escalate.

The news on the prices front isn't all bad, Musalem said, with the lingering impact of last year's tariff increases likely to fade in the current quarter, and housing price inflation also ebbing.

But with oil pushing in the other direction, and inflation on an array of services also high, Musalem said he'd be open to rate hikes if inflation starts to move higher and threatens to pull inflation expectations with it.

Monetary policy right now "is in a good place, and I think it's probably going to be appropriate to maintain policy at this level for some time," Musalem said. "We need to see all components of inflation come down in a balanced way. Right now, we have housing doing most of the work. Goods moving the opposite direction, and core non-housing services still sticking."

If it gets worse "at that point, the risk of de-anchoring inflation expectations would become relevant. Right now, inflation expectations medium to long term are very anchored, but they would become relevant, and at that point it might be appropriate to raise rates," he said.