"Today’s decision does not change our expectation of two additional hikes in 2019, but the timing of those hikes remains uncertain. We believe that hikes in March and September are still the most likely outcome, but that remains a close call." -Lewis Alexander, analyst at Nomura
"The meeting statement eased the forward guidance language slightly, but still indicated that the committee anticipates 'some further gradual [rate] increases.' Chair Powell was also insistent that balance sheet reduction should continue on its pre-scheduled course, noting the committee's view that the current pace of runoff has been smooth and has not been causing problems." -Jeremy Schwartz, economist at Credit Suisse
"We continue to project two hikes in 2019, with a terminal range of 2.75-3.00%–However, we emphasize the uncertainty around the exact timing of these hikes. Continued subdued core inflation removes any urgency for proceeding quickly to (or above) point estimates of neutral. A data-dependent Fed confronting uneven global growth and more volatile risk asset prices will be more cautious than the quarterly march toward neutral in 2018." -Andrew Hollenhorst, economist at Citi
"The deliberate reference to global financial conditions suggests to us that the Committee will hesitate to tighten policy further if heightened volatility in global financial markets persists. For some time we have been projecting two rate hikes by the Fed in 2019, one in March and one in June, before the policymakers put policy on hold for an extended period. That is still our forecast. However, today's policy statement raises the possibility that the timing of rate hikes in 2019 could be delayed if heightened financial volatility continues through the first quarter of 2019." -Kevin Logan, economist at HSBC