Fed Chair Powell Vows To Support The U.S. Expansion

 | Jul 17, 2019 08:00AM ET

It was far from the equivalent of Mario Draghi’s muscular “whatever it takes” comment in 2012, when the European Central Bank president famously outlined his resolve to save the euro. Yesterday’s comments from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell were considerably more nuanced, in part because the US economy is in far better shape than the euro area, either in 2012 or today. Yet Powell’s remarks still serve as a reminder that US growth has slowed and so the Federal Reserve is focused on extending the expansion, which is set to become the longest on record at the end of this month.

Powell vowed to “act as appropriate” to keep growth alive, signaling that a rate cut is a possibility at the July 31 monetary policy meeting. Citing several potential threats to the economy, he said that “many FOMC participants judged at the time of our most recent meeting in June that the combination of these factors strengthens the case for a somewhat more accommodative stance of policy.”

The market is certainly expecting a rate cut. Fed funds futures continue to price in a virtual certainty that the central bank will reduce the current 2.25%-2.50% target rate on July 31 by either 25 or 50 basis points, based on CME data.

The prospect of a rate cut has perplexed some hawkish observers, who say that the economy is still expanding and so the need is weak for a new round of monetary stimulus. But some analysts counter that the Fed has learned to be more proactive. As The Economist notes this week:

Central banks’ tendency during expansions has long been to continue raising rates even after bad news strikes, cutting them only when it is too late to avoid recession. Before each of the last three American downturns the Fed continued to raise rates even as bond markets priced in cuts.

Can you teach an old dog new tricks? The answer may be clearer by the end of the month, depending on the Fed’s policy announcement. Meantime, the worrisome slide in inflation expectations in recent months appears, for now, to have subsided. That takes off some of the pressure to cut rates, if only slightly. For example, the yield spread for the 5-year nominal Note less its inflation-indexed counterpart rose to 1.63% yesterday (July 16). Although that’s still moderately below the Fed’s 2.0% inflation target, the current spread marks a rebound from a month ago, when the market’s implied inflation outlook was 1.45%.