Powell tells markets Fed is flexible and aware of risks
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[January 05, 2019]
By Howard Schneider and Jonathan Spicer
ATLANTA/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Federal
Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell on Friday sought to ease market concerns
that the U.S. central bank was ignoring signs of an economic slowdown,
saying he was aware of the risks and would be patient and flexible in
policy decisions this year.
Speaking after months of volatility in world bond and stock markets,
Powell avoided some of the communication missteps that in the past have
roiled rather than calmed investors. He also pledged to stay in his job
even if asked to quit by President Donald Trump, who has been critical
of him.
Echoing a more sympathetic tone recently espoused by some of his
colleagues, Powell said the Fed was "listening" to markets and would
balance the steady flow of strong economic data against the array of
risks - from slowing global growth to worries about the U.S.-China trade
war - that have spooked investors.
The message was heard on Wall Street, where major stock indexes surged
about 3.5 percent to a more than two-week high. The market bounce came
after a volatile December selloff in which traders grew increasingly
skeptical of the Fed's upbeat forecasts and plans to keep hiking
interest rates in 2019.
"Particularly with the muted inflation readings that we've seen coming
in, we will be patient as we watch to see how the economy evolves,"
Powell told the American Economic Association in Atlanta.
The Fed, which hiked benchmark U.S. interest rates four times last year
including in December, is however not on a preset path and could pause
policy tightening as it did in 2016 when global growth concerns led to
doubts about the U.S. economic recovery, he said.
"We are always prepared to shift the stance of policy and to shift it
significantly" if needed, Powell said, speaking on a panel alongside
former Fed chiefs Janet Yellen and Ben Bernanke. That flexibility, he
added, applied as well to the monthly reductions to the Fed's balance
sheet.
The Fed chief stressed that the economy remained on track and that the
job market was quite strong. He did not address Fed forecasts from
December that sketched out two more rate rises this year, but, combined
with the messages of Fed presidents who in recent days downplayed that
tightening plan, he delivered the sort of temperate message investors
had hoped to hear.
"We really need to be looking at the data and having the economy tell
us, do we need to move more? Do we need to move more, faster? Can we
wait?," Cleveland Federal Reserve Bank President Loretta Mester said in
an interview with Reuters. "We should take our time and assess ... We
may be where we need to be."
Her comments, from a sometimes hawkish Fed official, highlighted the
change in tone at a central bank that, after two years of roughly
quarterly rate increases, was now assessing the risks of going too far.
Following Powell's remarks, Treasury yields rose and futures traders
began pricing in a small chance of a rate hike this year, versus no
chance seen before Powell began speaking.
Compared to comments he made after the Fed raised rates last month,
"it's not that he's changed his message ... but that he explained it
more patiently and in greater detail," said Lou Brien, market strategist
at DRW Trading in Chicago.
Powell's appearance in Atlanta was his first since last month's rate
increase and a public lashing from Trump, who according to sources asked
aides about his power to fire the Fed chairman.
[to top of second column] |
U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell speaks at the American
Economic Association/Allied Social Science Association (ASSA) 2019
meeting in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S., January 4, 2019.
REUTERS/Christopher Aluka Berry
The head of the Fed, once confirmed by the Senate, can only be removed "for
cause", not a policy disagreement. Powell responded with a terse "No" when asked
if he would resign if Trump requested him to do so.
SENSITIVE FED
The recent market turbulence has posed a dilemma for the Fed, as a seeming loss
of confidence in financial markets about the U.S. economy's prospects was offset
by upbeat data from the real economy, including a strong December jobs report.
The Labor Department reported on Friday that 312,000 jobs were created last
month, well above market expectations. Wages and labor force participation both
rose, signaling sustained economic strength.
Powell called the jobs report "very strong," with U.S. data "on track to sustain
good momentum into the new year."
The world's biggest economy expanded well above potential last year and, along
with U.S. consumers, is expected to remain strong through this year. Yet signs
are growing that Trump's tit-for-tat trade war with China is taking a toll: this
week, tech giant Apple and grains trader Cargill warned about weaker sales in
China.
Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan said on Thursday that planned rate hikes
should be halted for now, while on Friday Mester said she sees only one or two
rate hikes this year. A third Fed president, Thomas Barkin of Richmond, said he
is hearing more concerns about economic risks and trade.
"The markets are feeling better that the Fed is not strangling the overall
economy and perhaps forcing it into a recession, and that removes a monetary
policy concern that has been hanging over the market for the past few months,"
said Robert Pavlik, chief investment strategist and senior portfolio manager at
SlateStone Wealth LLC.
The Fed's tightening cycle includes both rate hikes and the gradual shedding of
its more than $4 trillion in assets. Powell said he did not think the latter was
having much impact on markets, but that the strategy would be changed if it
started interfering with the bank's broader goals of maintaining strong
employment and stable inflation.
While not a change in policy, it was a nod to market concerns that the Fed had a
key decision on "auto-pilot," as Powell put it last month, even as it pledged to
be dependent on economic data.
"The markets are pricing in downside risks ... and they are obviously well ahead
of the data, particularly if you look at this morning's labor market data,"
Powell said.
"I'll just say that we are listening carefully to that ..., listening
sensitively to the message that markets are sending, and we are going to be
taking those downside risks into account as we make policy going forward."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider, Jonathan Spicer and Ann Saphir; Additional
reporting by Amy Caren Daniel and Karen Brettell; Editing by Paul Simao and
James Dalgleish)
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