Fed's Powell holds fast to 'this year' timeline for bond-buying taper
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[August 28, 2021] By
Howard Schneider and Ann Saphir
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Federal Reserve
Chair Jerome Powell, in a speech that affirmed an ongoing U.S. economic
recovery and explained why there is no rush to tighten monetary policy,
gave a detailed account on Friday of why he regards a spike in inflation
as temporary and offered no signal on when the central bank plans to cut
its asset purchases beyond saying it could be "this year."
In remarks to the annual Jackson Hole economic conference, Powell
indicated the Fed will remain cautious in any eventual decision to raise
interest rates as it tries to nurse the economy to full employment,
saying he wants to avoid chasing "transitory" inflation and potentially
discouraging job growth in the process - a defense in effect of the new
approach to Fed policy he introduced a year ago.
On the separate and potentially imminent decision by the U.S. central
bank to begin reducing its $120 billion in monthly purchases of U.S.
Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities, Powell said he agreed with
the majority of his colleagues that if job growth continues it "could be
approriate...this year."
The weeks since the Fed's policy meeting in July "brought more progress"
towards repairing the jobs market, Powell said, with nearly a million
positions added and continued progress expected.
But it also coincided with "the further spread of the Delta variant" of
the coronavirus, Powell noted, raising risks that would need to be
evaluated as the debate over the bond-buying "taper" continues ahead of
the Fed's Sept. 21-22 policy meeting.
In the days before Powell's speech, several Fed regional bank presidents
said they were eager to get a taper underway, and to reduce the asset
purchases fast, with some arguing the shift was needed to prepare for
interest rate increases that may be needed sooner than expected.
Data released earlier on Friday showed inflation continuing to rise. The
personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index, a key inflation
gauge watched by the Fed, was up 4.2% in the 12 months through July, the
third straight month it has been at least double the central bank's 2%
target.
Powell, however, was non-committal, and gave no precise indication of
when a reduction in bond purchases might start.
"We will be carefully assessing incoming data and the evolving risks,"
he said, signaling that Fed discussions about exactly when to reduce the
bond-buying program not only remain unresolved, but must be squared
against the health and economic risks posed by the highly contagious
Delta variant.
Stocks were trading higher after Powell's speech, with the benchmark S&P
500 index hitting a record high, as investors took the view that Powell
was signaling no rush to tighten policy. Treasury bond yields edged
lower and the dollar weakened against a basket of trading-partner
currencies. "Powell understands that tapering will happen, but it's not
going to happen sooner than later," said Kim Forrest, chief investment
officer at Bokeh Capital Partners in Pittsburgh.
'PREPARED TO ADJUST'
Powell's remarks offered a broad road map of where the U.S. central bank
stands as it moves away from policies rolled out to counteract the
pandemic's economic shock, while also accounting for the fact that the
health crisis has not passed, and that millions of Americans remain out
of work as a result of it.
[to top of second column] |
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell adjusts his tie as he arrives to
testify before a Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee
hearing on “The Semiannual Monetary Policy Report to the Congress”
on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., July 15, 2021. REUTERS/Kevin
Lamarque/File Photo
The pivot away from asset purchases now appears just a matter of time, as long
as robust U.S. job growth continues through August and into the fall.
Fed officials have said they expect the resurgent health crisis will not throw
the recovery off track, though concerns about COVID-19 risks did force the
central bank itself to move its Jackson Hole symposium from a mountain resort in
Wyoming to a virtual event for the second year in a row.
Expectations for continued job growth are in part based on reopened schools,
eased childcare constraints, and a steady return to consumer spending on
close-contact activities - developments that may be influenced by the worsening
outbreak.
Fed officials "expect to see continued strong job creation. And we will be
learning more about the Delta variant’s effects," Powell said in his speech.
"For now, I believe that policy is well positioned; as always, we are prepared
to adjust."
The next major decision, of when to raise the benchmark overnight interest rate
from the current near-zero level, will be subject to a "substantially more
stringent test," Powell said, that satisfies Fed officials that the economy has
reached maximum employment and inflation is sustainably at the 2% target.
Powell, who spearheaded the new policy framework put in place by the Fed last
year, is being considered by President Joe Biden for a second term as head of
the central bank. Powell's current term expires early next year.
Much of Powell's speech on Friday was devoted to an exposition of why he feels
current high inflation does not necessarily meet the test because it is likely
to pass, with the reasons ranging from supply chain bottlenecks that are likely
to ease to globalization acting as an anchor on prices.
While the current fast pace of price increases is "a cause for concern," Powell
said it would also be damaging if the Fed jumped the gun with a premature
decision to hike rates.
"We have much ground to cover to reach maximum employment, and time will tell
whether we have reached 2 percent inflation on a sustainable basis," Powell
said.
"If a central bank tightens policy in response to factors that turn out to be
temporary ... the ill-timed policy move unnecessarily slows hiring and other
economic activity and pushes inflation lower than desired. Today, with
substantial slack remaining in the labor market and the pandemic continuing,
such a mistake could be particularly harmful."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Paul Simao)
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