US Federal Reserve was forced to keep the target range for the Federal Funds rate flat at 0.25-0.50% after its June 14-15 meeting, owing to continuous risks to economic outlook and stagnating inflation expectations. Domestic data has been uneven recently, with mild payrolls report considered to be the key trigger for accepting the status-quo. All member of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) voted for the decision, with Kansas City Fed President Esther George abandoning her hawkish call to raise the benchmark by 25 basis points. Janet Yellen, the Chair, agreed that there are some downside forces to interest rates that may be long-lasting. On the short-term basis, she admitted that the upcoming UK referendum on EU membership has weighed on the Fed's decision to postpone the upward revision to the Fed Funds target range.