That assessment would echo the formal report the Fed submitted
to the U.S. Congress on Friday, which repeated the central
bank's view that its current target range for short-term
borrowing costs, between 1.5% and 1.75%, is "appropriate" to
keep the expansion on track.
Not just the message will be familiar; Powell will also be
addressing a familiar crowd. His calendars show he has talked
privately with most of the lawmakers set to publicly grill him
this week.
Please see graphic: Powell no stranger on the Hill -
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/editorcharts/USA-FED-POWELL/0H001QEH677G/index.html
Indeed Powell has made lawmaker outreach a signature feature of
his tenure. In just two years on the job, he has spent about 96
hours in private meetings, phone calls, group meals or study
sessions with senators and members of the House of
Representatives.
That compares with 77 hours for his predecessor, Janet Yellen,
over her four years as Fed chair.
With risks like trade policy uncertainty receding, Powell has
signaled he sees no reason to adjust U.S. interest rates unless
there is a "material" change to the current outlook.
That's a view he is likely to reiterate when he presents the
Fed's monetary policy report on Tuesday to the House Financial
Services Committee and on Wednesday to the Senate Banking
Committee.
"His message will probably be that, if rate cuts are coming,
they would come solely in response to global disruptions
associated with the virus," said Robert Perli, an economist at
Cornerstone Macro. "He will likely say clearly that the U.S.
economy is inherently healthy."
Investors will be watching carefully for any new details on the
Fed's plans for its balance sheet and for the short-term funding
markets into which it has been pumping liquidity to prevent a
repeat of an unexpected spike in the policy rate last fall.
A letter some Democratic U.S. senators sent last week to Powell
on the steps the Fed is taking suggests Powell could be in for
some pointed questions on the subject.
(Reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
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