Fed chair says bank accounts 'safe' despite Trump's teardown of consumer
protection agency
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[February 12, 2025] By
CHRISTOPHER RUGABER
WASHINGTON (AP) — Americans’ bank accounts are safe despite the Trump
administration's shutdown of a consumer financial regulatory agency,
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said Tuesday.
Powell, testifying before the Senate Banking Committee, said “bank
accounts overall across the economy are safe” and backed by government
deposit insurance. Powell's comments followed partisan comments from
Republican and Democratic senators regarding the Trump administration's
order over the weekend for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to
end all of its supervisory and rule-making work.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren, a Democrat from Massachusetts who pushed for its
creation of the CFPB in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis and
recession, said, "I’d be really worried about doing business with a
giant bank when there’s no cop on the beat.”
Powell, meanwhile, received little scrutiny from senators about the
Fed's interest-rate policy, which has contributed to higher borrowing
costs but has also been credited for helping bring down inflation.
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And while several senators flagged the spike in inflation that followed
the pandemic, Powell faced little questioning about when the Fed
believes it could return inflation — now at 2.6%, according to the Fed's
preferred measure — to its 2% target.
Sen. John Kennedy, a Republican from Louisiana, praised Powell and the
Fed for bringing down inflation from a 7.2% peak in June 2022. Kennedy
noted that many economists had forecast that the Fed’s steep rate hikes
in 2022 and 2023 would cause a recession. Yet, instead, the economy has
continued to expand.
“The fact is, knock on wood, we have experienced a soft landing,”
Kennedy said. Fed officials “deserve credit” for that, he added.
Powell largely sought to avoid responding when asked about the potential
impact of additional tariffs, which President Donald Trump has proposed,
on inflation and the Fed's key rate, which is currently at about 4.3%,
down from a two-decade high of 5.3% last year.
Powell instead underscored his previous comments that with the economy
generally healthy the Fed can afford to wait and see how the economy
evolves and whether tariffs affect growth and inflation before making
any further rate cuts. The Fed cut its key rate three times last year,
but last month left it unchanged.
"We do not need to be in a hurry to adjust our policy stance,” Powell
said in the first of two days of testimony on Capitol Hill.
Powell was quickly thrust into the partisan turmoil surrounding Trump’s
flurry of executive orders and the efforts of billionaire Elon Musk,
through the Department of Government Efficiency, to slash government
programs.
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Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell speaks to the Senate Banking
Committee, Tuesday, Feb. 11, 2025, on Capitol Hill in Washington.
(AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)
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Warren, who repeatedly referred to “co-president Musk,” also urged
Powell to maintain the Fed’s support for the CFPB, which gets its
funding from the Fed.
“Do not make the Federal Reserve an accomplice to this illegal act, and
forever sully the reputation of the Fed,” Warren said.
Republican senators, however, downplayed the impact of dismantling the
CFPB. The bureau has sought to cap overdraft fees, ban junk fees, and
says it has returned $20 billion to consumers since its inception.
Sen. Pete Ricketts, a Republican from Nebraska, said that state agencies
can still provide consumers with regulatory protections.
“To say that nobody is out there looking after consumers is inaccurate
and we ought not to try and scare consumers right now,” Ricketts said.
The Fed Chair also said the central bank has launched a second review of
its policy strategies and its communications tools. Powell reiterated
that the review would not focus on whether to change its 2% inflation
target, which some economists argue is too low. Powell has repeatedly
said that the Fed shouldn’t change the target while it is still
struggling to get inflation down to 2%.
After the Fed’s last policy review in 2019, it said it would seek
inflation that averaged 2% over time. Some economists have argued that
the change led the Fed to react too slowly to the inflation spike in
2021 and 2022. The Fed didn’t begin raising its key interest rate until
March 2022. Rate hikes are intended to slow borrowing and spending to
cool inflation.
Last week, comments by many Fed officials — as well as a decline in the
unemployment rate — suggested the odds of a rate cut anytime soon have
dwindled.
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Fewer cuts could translate into a longer period of elevated mortgage
rates and higher costs to borrow money for everything from autos to
credit cards. Still, mortgage rates are closely tied to the yield on the
10-year Treasury note, which can move independently of the Fed's
actions.
Last Friday, Fed governor Adriana Kugler said that the labor market was
“stable” and that “gives us a little bit of time to make some
decisions.”
“The cautious and the prudent step is to hold the (Fed's key) rate where
it is for some time,” Kugler said.
The government said last Friday that employers added a solid number of
jobs last month while the unemployment rate ticked down for the second
straight month to 4%, historically quite low. Hiring in November and
December was revised much higher.
The jobs report “bolsters our confidence that the Fed cutting cycle is
over,” economists at Bank of America wrote in a note Friday.
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