• 227
  • Comment
  • 1

Powell Tells Congress the Fed Is "Strongly Committed" to Bringing Inflation Down

Tiger Newspress2022-06-22

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell told congressional lawmakers Wednesday that the central bank is determined to bringing down inflation and has the ability to make that happen.

“At the Fed, we understand the hardship high inflation is causing. We are strongly committed to bringing inflation back down, and we are moving expeditiously to do so,” the Fed chief said in remarks for the Senate Banking Committee. “We have both the tools we need and the resolve it will take to restore price stability on behalf of American families and businesses.”

Along with expressing resolve on inflation, Powell said economic conditions are generally favorable, with a strong labor market and persistently high demand.

However, he acknowledged that inflation is running too hot and needs to come down.

“Over coming months, we will be looking for compelling evidence that inflation is moving down, consistent with inflation returning to 2%,” Powell said. “We anticipate that ongoing rate increases will be appropriate; the pace of those changes will continue to depend on the incoming data and the evolving outlook for the economy.”

Powell’s remarks are part of a congressionally mandated semiannual report on monetary policy – more commonly known in markets as the Humphrey Hawkins report and testimony, for the act which mandated them.

This is an especially delicate moment for Fed policy.

Over its past three meetings, the central bank has raised rates a cumulative 150 basis points – 1.5 percentage points – in an effort to tackle inflation that is running at its fastest annual pace in more than 40 years.

The 75 basis point increase at last week's Federal Open Market Committee meeting marked the biggest single hike since 1994.

Powell has stressed that he thinks tighter monetary policy will be an effective tool against inflation, and has said he thinks the economy is well positioned to handle higher rates.

However, cracks have been showing in the economy this year that indicate the higher rates are coming as the economy already is slowing.

Gross domestic product declined at a 1.5% annualized pace in the first quarter and is on pace to be flat in the second quarter, according to the Atlanta Fed. Housing sales have been plunging and there even have been some signs that the jobs market is slowly decelerating at a time when inflation-adjusted wages have fallen 3% over the past year.

Despite the economic wobbles, Powell and his fellow policymakers have indicated the rate hikes will continue. Projections released at the meeting last week point to the Fed’s benchmark short-term borrowing rate rising to 3.4% by the end of this year, from its current targeted range of 1.5%-17.5%.

Disclaimer: Investing carries risk. This is not financial advice. The above content should not be regarded as an offer, recommendation, or solicitation on acquiring or disposing of any financial products, any associated discussions, comments, or posts by author or other users should not be considered as such either. It is solely for general information purpose only, which does not consider your own investment objectives, financial situations or needs. TTM assumes no responsibility or warranty for the accuracy and completeness of the information, investors should do their own research and may seek professional advice before investing.

Report

Comment

  • LuckyPiggie
    ·2022-06-23
    Try to solve 1 problem by creating many others [lovely]  .... 
    Reply
    Report
  • Jess261
    ·2022-06-23
    Okay
    Reply
    Report
  • robot1234
    ·2022-06-23
    Ray Dalio Says Reducing Inflation Will Come at Great Cost. Ray Dalio wrote Tuesday on LinkedIn it’s “naive and inconsistent with how the economic machine works” to think the Federal Reserve raising interest rates “will make things good again once it gets inflation under control.” While tightening leads to less consumer spending, which may reduce inflation, it doesn’t make things better, the billionaire founder of Bridgewater Associates LP said. “It just shifts some of the squeezing of people via inflation to squeezing them via giving them less buying power,” Dalio added. “There isn’t anything that the Fed can do to fight inflation without creating economic weakness,” Dalio wrote in his conclusion. “With debt assets and liabilities as high as they are and projected to increase due to the go
    Reply
    Report
  • CL777
    ·2022-06-23
    Banks to rise 
    Reply
    Report
  • chinks29
    ·2022-06-23
    Ok
    Reply
    Report
  • Jon Yeo
    ·2022-06-23
    Thkq
    Reply
    Report
  • SvipS
    ·2022-06-22
    Hopefully that by end of Jul raised, people will get use to the higher cost of borrowing and regulate their trading behaviour against that.
    Reply
    Report
  • Berloh
    ·2022-06-22
    Behind the curve he meant?
    Reply
    Report
  • Jawslea
    ·2022-06-22
    Keep cash first.  Invest during recession.
    Reply
    Report
  • Louisyeo
    ·2022-06-22
    Full pump. Bear is over
    Reply
    Report
  • SiewWeng
    ·2022-06-22
    GG
    Reply
    Report
  • blessed_1
    ·2022-06-22
    more downside
    Reply
    Report
  • MFME
    ·2022-06-22
    Really?
    Reply
    Report
  • Jennifer58
    ·2022-06-22
    Nice
    Reply
    Report
  • 339742f5
    ·2022-06-22
    Ok
    Reply
    Report
  • BenjiFuji
    ·2022-06-22
    Lovely 
    Reply
    Report
  • WW1012
    ·2022-06-22
    Good
    Reply
    Report
  • LawrenceLBC
    ·2022-06-22
    Nice
    Reply
    Report
 
 
 
 

Most Discussed

 
 
 
 
 

7x24

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Company: TTMF Limited. Tech supported by Xiangshang Yixin.

Email:uservice@ttm.financial