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Jerome Powell's Enigmatic Speech at Jackson Hole: A Bumpy Landing Ahead, According to Franklin Templeton

Jerome Powell's Enigmatic Speech at Jackson Hole: A Bumpy Landing Ahead, According to Franklin Templeton
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  1. Powell’s key points
    1. Slave to dead economists?

      According to Franklin Templeton, in his day, Federal Reserve (Fed) Chairman Alan Greenspan was (in)famous for his irascible obscurity—often speaking without being fully understood.

      In this year’s much-anticipated speech at the Fed’s annual central bankers’ gathering in Jackson Hole, Chairman Jerome Powell appears to have employed Greenspan’s speechwriter. Powell said a lot about the economy and inflation, but he obscured a great deal about future Fed policy. Yet beneath the (intended?) fog of his remarks was a worrisome message for devotees of soft-landing scenarios. Fasten seatbelts—the arriving passengers won’t enjoy a view of the majestic Tetons and should brace for a bumpy landing. 

       

      In his day, Federal Reserve (Fed) Chairman Alan Greenspan was (in)famous for his irascible obscurity—often speaking without being fully understood.

      In this year’s much-anticipated speech at the Fed’s annual central bankers’ gathering in Jackson Hole, Chairman Jerome Powell appears to have employed Greenspan’s speechwriter. Powell said a lot about the economy and inflation, but he obscured a great deal about future Fed policy. Yet beneath the (intended?) fog of his remarks was a worrisome message for devotees of soft-landing scenarios. Fasten seatbelts—the arriving passengers won’t enjoy a view of the majestic Tetons and should brace for a bumpy landing.

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      The initial market response has been minimal. Equity and bond prices bounced around immediately after the speech, but diverged somewhat by the close as stocks finished higher while bond yields rose. We’re not sure that’s right and here’s why:

       

      Powell’s key points

      To begin, Powell’s speech was a somewhat dull resuscitation of recent economic data, with a focus on the details of core personal consumption expenditures inflation (the Fed’s preferred measure). Having noted welcome declines in goods inflation and a probable decline in shelter inflation, Powell emphasized that non-housing core services inflation has been less responsive to either changes in the economy or to Fed tightening.

      Powell also remarked that current Fed policy is already “restrictive,” meaning that the real (inflation-adjusted) fed funds rate is above broadly accepted ranges of what constitutes its “neutral” level.

      But Powell carefully avoided saying what comes next. He noted that it could be a longer pause or additional rate hikes. But by failing to mention rate cuts, he sent his clearest message of the speech, namely that the Fed is either on hold with an already restrictive stance or might hike rates further. Easing anytime soon, however, is off the table.

       

      Slave to dead economists?

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      That’s the clearest message from Powell. Parsing his other “Greenspan-esque” remarks, it seems the Fed is sticking to the view that the achievement of its 2% inflation objective requires “slack” in the economy. “Slack” is, of course, a euphemism for job losses.

      That idea stems from the Phillips Curve—first developed over 60 years ago—which purports to show an inverse relationship between inflation and unemployment (i.e., higher unemployment leads to lower inflation). But many economists are less certain. The Phillips Curve has never depicted a stable relationship between joblessness and inflation, and in recent decades it has been even less reliable. In fact, many measures of US inflation have fallen significantly this year without the unemployment rate rising.

      However, it seems as though most Federal Open Market Committee members side with Powell’s Phillips Curve approach. If so, then the Fed is indeed laying down a marker for investors. Specifically, the implication is that policy must remain restrictive (or become more restrictive) until the unemployment rate rises. Also, the Fed’s threshold level of “slack” appears to be at least a 4.0% US unemployment rate (up from 3.6%).

      If so, the Fed is signaling that despite (or because of) the fog that surrounds our understanding of inflation dynamics, a bumpy landing is an unavoidable necessity.

       


      Franklin Templeton

      Franklin Templeton

      The company was founded in 1947 in New York by Rupert H. Johnson, Sr., who ran a successful retail brokerage firm from an office on Wall Street. He named the company for US founding father Benjamin Franklin because Franklin epitomized the ideas of frugality and prudence when it came to saving and investing. The company's first line of mutual funds, Franklin Custodian Funds, was a series of conservatively managed equity and bond funds designed to appeal to most investors.


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