Miami Herald (Sunday)

Fed chair walks tightrope of acting to ease inflation fight and articulati­ng his position

- BY TOM HUDSON

Last week, it was the Federal Reserve’s Open Market Committee shaping monetary policy and investor expectatio­ns. It will be the Fed’s open-mouth practices at work this week.

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell handled his common practice of making controlled public appearance­s after an interest-rate decision by the central bank. He is due to talk again when he appears Tuesday at The Economic Club of Washington, D.C. It likely will be the first comments he’s made after Wednesday’s press conference following the Fed’s smallest rate hike in almost a year.

“The disinflati­onary process has started,” Powell stated then, using Fed-speak to describe inflation cooling somewhat from its 40-year high. The statement is far from a declaratio­n of victory in its yearlong inflation fight, though. “We have more work to do,” he said during his opening statement to reporters after the ratehike decision.

Powell’s problem is that Wall Street isn’t convinced. The predominan­t view expressed by the bond futures market is that the Fed will raise rates by a quarter percent in March and then hold steady through late summer.

On Wednesday, Powell was vague with his rateincrea­se forecasts. “We’re talking about a couple more rate hikes,” he said. But he was clear in contradict­ing the market odds of a couple of interest-rate cuts late in the year: “I just don’t see us cutting rates this year.”

Tuesday’s lunchtime appearance before the powerful and plugged-in in Washington gives Powell the opportunit­y to massage his message after four days of market reaction. Stocks rallied after last week’s decision and comments. Convention­al wisdom is that by slowing down its rate increases, the Fed is close to ending this cycle of higher borrowing costs.

The agency is explicitly tackling inflation with its monetary policy. It is implicitly fighting to restore its reputation. Two years ago, at an appearance at a different economic club, Powell acknowledg­ed “some upward pressure on [consumer] prices.” But he downplayed any concern to the Economic Club of New York, saying that pressure “will be neither large nor sustained.”

U.S. consumer inflation was 1.7% at the time. It would hit 9% a year and a half later.

While the Fed’s late and then aggressive effort to raise borrowing costs may be slowing, its work to repair its reputation is ongoing.

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 ?? AP, file ?? Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell was vague last week with rate-increase forecasts. He will speak on Tuesday.
AP, file Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell was vague last week with rate-increase forecasts. He will speak on Tuesday.
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