Orlando Sentinel

Powell signals rate cut likely at end of July

- By Heather Long

WASHINGTON — Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell had two messages for Congress on Wednesday: Central bank independen­ce is critical and an interest rate cut is likely at the end of July.

President Donald Trump has repeatedly bashed the Fed, blaming Powell and his team for harming the economy by keeping interest rates too high and threatenin­g to try to remove Powell as chair if the situation doesn’t change. Powell hinted Wednesday that a cut is likely to happen this month because Trump’s trade war and slowing growth abroad are starting to bite.

“Since (June) ... it appears that uncertaint­ies around trade tensions and concerns about the strength of the global economy continue to weigh on the U.S. economic outlook. Inflation pressures remain muted,” Powell said during his testimony to the House Financial Services Committee.

U.S. stocks hit record highs with the S&P 500 index crossing 3,000 for the first time ever. Wall Street is pricing in a near 100 percent probabilit­y of a reduction in interest rates at the Fed’s July 31 meeting.

“Jay Powell fully endorsed the July rate cut and did ... nothing to pull the markets back from that expectatio­n,” Peter Boockvar, chief investment officer at the Bleakley Advisory Group, wrote to clients.

Many, including economist Ed Yardeni, president of Yardeni Research, say the latest stock market highs are a direct result of “Powell’s Pirouette” on policy. At the start of the year he wanted to be “patient” on any changes to interest rates cuts, but in June he changed to signal that a rate cut was now likely even though the economy remains solid.

The U.S. economy is doing “reasonably well,” Powell said, but he noted that business investment has “slowed notably,” likely because of the uncertaint­y around trade and global growth. He also stressed that the economic gains have not been shared evenly by everyone. Hispanics, African Americans and those in rural communitie­s are continuing to have a harder time finding jobs that pay well.

Investors confidence in a rate cut was further boosted by the release Wednesday of the minutes for the Federal Reserve’s June 18-19 meeting that said most of the board’s officials expressed concern that the outlook for the U.S. economy was weakening, and many said the Fed should soon cut rates if uncertaint­y continued to weigh on growth.

Associated Press contribute­d.

 ?? ZACH GIBSON/GETTY ?? Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell arrives Wednesday to testify before the House Financial Services Committee.
ZACH GIBSON/GETTY Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell arrives Wednesday to testify before the House Financial Services Committee.

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