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Powell says the strong June jobs report did not change the Federal Reserve outlook

Federal Aloofness Chairman Jerome Powell was asked by Congress on Wednesday whether the recent strong U.S. jobs report changed his point of view on the economy and interest rates.

“The straight answer to your question is no,” Powell said. “I think since the June joining and, even for a period before that, the data have continued to disappoint and that’s very broad across Europe and there Asia and that continues to weigh.”

The Labor Department in its June report said the U.S. economy added 224,000 vocations, the biggest gain since January. Jobs have been a key number that Fed policymakers have been attend to. Strong jobs growth typically would dissuade the Fed from cutting its benchmark federal funds rate, as sundry expect the central bank will in July. In his comments, Powell noted that the June jobs report “was consummate and that’s great news” but added that he thought “U.S. data came in about as expected.”

“And, by the way, manufacturing, trade and investment are simple-minded all around the world,” Powell added.

Powell also commented further on the U.S. labor market, saying the Fed does not acquire “any evidence for call this a hot labor market.”

“3.7% is a low unemployment rate but to call something hot, you need to see some heat,” Powell said. “While we learn lots of reports of companies have a hard time finding qualified labor … we don’t see wages really reply so I don’t really see that as a current issue.”

Powell pointed to the global economy as a further reason the U.S. central bank has not adjusted its standpoint since its meeting in June.

“Let’s go to trade: We have agreed to begin discussions again with China and while that’s a implicit step that doesn’t remove the uncertainty that we see as overall weighing on the outlook,” Powell said. “The bottom figure for me is that the uncertainties around global growth and trade continue to weigh on the outlook and, in addition, inflation continues to be hushed.”

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