[1/3] The exterior of the Marriner S. Eccles Federal Reserve Board Building is seen in Washington, D.C., U.S., June 14, 2022. REUTERS/Sarah Silbiger

WASHINGTON, June 16 (Reuters) - U.S. Federal Reserve officials struck a hawkish tone in their first comments since the central bank held the policy interest rate steady at its meeting this week but signaled that rate hikes will likely resume.

"Core inflation is not coming down like I thought it would," Federal Reserve Gov. Christopher Waller said at an economics conference in Norway. "Inflation is just not moving and that's going to require, probably, some more tightening to try to get that going down."

In earlier prepared remarks he said that changes in U.S. credit conditions since the failure of Silicon Valley Bank in early March were "in line" with financial tightening that was already underway due to Federal Reserve interest rate increases -- comments that downplayed the idea a worse-than-anticipated contraction in credit might make further Fed rate increases less necessary.

"It is still not clear that recent strains in the banking sector materially intensified the tightening of lending conditions," beyond what the Fed was trying to do anyway through its interest rate policy, Waller said.

The U.S. economy was "still ripping along for the most part," he said, with the underlying pace of price increases "moving sideways."

Recent declines in headline inflation have been driven largely by food and energy prices, volatile commodities whose price swings can mask underlying inflation trends.

Excluding those goods, the personal consumption expenditures price index as of April was increasing at a 4.7% annual pace, more than twice the central bank's target.

In separate comments at a financial officers forum in Maryland, Richmond Federal Reserve president Thomas Barkin said he was "comfortable" with further rate increases given that inflation was not yet on an obvious path back to 2%.

Demand in the U.S. was weakening somewhat, he said, but "I am still looking to be convinced of the plausible story that slowing demand returns inflation relatively quickly" to the 2% target, Barkin said. "If coming data doesn’t support that story, I’m comfortable doing more."

The Fed this week ended its run of 10 consecutive rate hikes when policymakers decided to keep the benchmark overnight interest rate in a range of from 5% to 5.25%.

But they also issued new projections showing 12 of 18 Fed officials see rates rising at least another half point by the end of the year.

Though Fed chair Jerome Powell at a press conference Wednesday said no decision had been made about the upcoming July Fed meeting, investors and other analysts broadly expect the Fed to resume rate increases.

Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee, one of the more dovish U.S. central bankers, said that he thinks of pausing the Fed's rate hike campaign as a "reconnaissance mission... before charging up the hill another time.

"There are conflicting pieces of evidence coming in on the economy: are we too hot and need more, have we done enough by raising the interest rate five full percentage points over the last year?" Goolsbee told National Public Radio's "All Things Considered."

The pandemic changed the dynamics of consumer spending, work, and lifestyle, Goolsbee said, and what's clear is that the Fed cannot be too confident in any one month of data.

"We just going to have play it by ear, I guess," Goolsbee. "For me, the forecast is pretty benign, and the question is, are we on that golden path, or not," of cooling inflation without starting a big recession.

None of the three policymakers spoke directly to their policy preferences for the July meeting.

Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Alistair Bell

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Thomson Reuters

Covers the U.S. Federal Reserve, monetary policy and the economy, a graduate of the University of Maryland and Johns Hopkins University with previous experience as a foreign correspondent, economics reporter and on the local staff of the Washington Post.

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