Fed Chair Powell repeats vow to act 'as appropriate'
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[September 07, 2019] By
John Revill and Brenna Hughes Neghaiwi
ZURICH (Reuters) - The U.S. Federal Reserve
will continue to act "as appropriate" to sustain the economic expansion
in the world's biggest economy, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said Friday in
Zurich, sticking to a phrase that financial markets have read as
signaling further interest-rate reductions ahead.
"Our obligation is to use our tools to support the economy, and that’s
what we’ll continue to do," Powell said at the University of Zurich.
Still, he said, "We are clearly at a time where there is a range of
views" among Fed policymakers meeting Sept. 17-18 to decide on rates.
Powell's careful wording reflects a split within the U.S. central bank
about how best to respond to an economy where the job market and
consumer spending are strong but rising trade tensions between Beijing
and Washington, Britain's possibly messy exit from the European Union,
and a broad global slowdown pose risks.
Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren for instance has made the case for
leaving rates where they are until those risks are more tangible in the
economic data.
Others including St. Louis Fed President James Bullard have called for a
half-a-percentage point interest-rate cut to get ahead of the trade war
risks and bring the Fed's policy rate more in line with market
expectations. Meanwhile, financial markets are betting Fed policymakers
will agree to split the difference and follow their quarter-point rate
cut in July with another one later this month.
Powell said policymakers will be closely watching geopolitical risks,
financial conditions, and other incoming economic data as they weigh
what to do.
MIXED DATA
Fed officials are particularly focused on whether a drop in business
spending and a manufacturing slump brought on by rising trade
uncertainty is spreading to other parts of the economy. Factory activity
declined in August as U.S. President Donald Trump ratcheted up tariffs
on imports from China, and China retaliated in kind.
Fed research published earlier this week estimated that trade
uncertainty could shave about $200 billion from U.S. GDP by early 2020,
as companies hold off on investments.
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U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell speaks during the "The
Economic Outlook and Monetary Policy" panel discussion hosted by the
Swiss Institute of International Studies at the University of Zurich
in Zurich, Switzerland September 6, 2019. REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann
But so far there are few signs the uncertainty is translating into job loss.
U.S. job growth slowed more than expected in August, a government report showed
Friday, but strong wage gains and a rebound in hours worked suggested
resilience.
Powell, who spoke a few hours after the jobs report, said it was his expectation
the U.S. and world economies would continue to grow moderately and would avoid
any recession.
But there are also troubling signs in financial markets, most notably an
inversion of the Treasury yield curve, which historically has pointed to a
recession 18 months to two years ahead. The Fed's target range for its benchmark
policy rate, now 2% to 2.25%, exceeds yields on nearly all Treasuries.
Trump on Friday kept up his call for the Fed to lower interest rates, saying
policymakers were wrong to raise them last year.
Powell for his part said he wasn't listening to Trump, or to a call from former
New York Fed President Bill Dudley for factoring the 2020 presidential election
into his rate-setting decisions.
"Political factors play absolutely no role in our process, and my colleagues and
I would not tolerate any attempt to include them in our decision-making or our
discussions," he said. "We are going to act as appropriate to sustain the
expansion."
Powell's remarks are the last publicly scheduled comments from a U.S. central
banker before the Fed's September meeting.
(Writing by Ann Saphir; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Andrea Ricci)
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