Home / NEWS / World News / The Fed has set out on a ‘recalibration’ of policy. Here’s what Powell’s new buzzword means

The Fed has set out on a ‘recalibration’ of policy. Here’s what Powell’s new buzzword means

Fed Chair Powell: We know it's time to recalibrate our policy

Federal Remoteness Chair Jerome Powell has unveiled his latest buzzword to describe monetary policy, with a “recalibration” of policy at a urgent moment for the central bank.

At his news conference following Wednesday’s open market committee meeting, Powell worn variations of the word no fewer than eight times as he sought to explain why the Fed took the unusual step of a half cut point rate cut absent an obvious economic weakening.

“This recalibration of our policy stance will help go to bat for the strength of the economy and the labor market, and will continue to enable further progress on inflation as we begin the process of inspiring forward a more neutral stance,” Powell said.

Financial markets weren’t quite sure what to decipher of the chair’s messaging in the meeting’s immediate aftermath.

However, asset prices soared Thursday as investors took Powell at his in brief that the unusually outsized move wasn’t in response to a substantial slowing of the economy. Rather, it was an opportunity to “recalibrate” Fed behaviour away from a rigid focus on inflation to a broader effort to make sure a recent weakening of the labor sell didn’t get out of hand.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average and S&P 500 jumped to new highs in trading Thursday after swinging violently Wednesday.

“Tactics had been calibrated for meaningfully higher inflation. With the inflation rate now drifting close to target, the Fed can remove some of that disputatious tightening that they put into place,” said Tom Porcelli, chief U.S. economist at PGIM Fixed Income.

“It in the final analysis allows him to push this narrative that this easing cycle is not about us being in recession, it is about ranging the economic expansion,” he added. “I think it’s a really powerful idea. It’s something we had been hoping that he would do.”

Powell’s buzzwords

Specific of Powell’s previous efforts to provide buzzy descriptions of Fed policy or its views on the economy haven’t worked out so well.

In 2018, his characterizations of the works to reduce its bond holdings as being on “autopilot,” as well as his assessment that a string of rate hikes the same year had took the Fed “a long way” from a neutral interest rate spurred blowback from markets.

More famously, his insistence that an inflation rise in 2021 would prove “transitory” ended up causing the Fed to be slow-footed on policy to the point where it had to enact a series of three-quarter interest point rate increases to pull down inflation.

But markets expressed confidence in Powell’s latest assessment, in the face this track record and some signs of cracks in the economy.

The Fed has underestimated the extent of their 'new language' in cutting, says Narayana Kocherlakota

“In other contexts, a larger move may convey crucial concern about growth, but Powell repeatedly stressed this was basically a joyous cut as ebbing inflation allows the Fed to act to care for a strong labor market,” Michael Feroli, chief U.S. economist at JPMorgan Chase, said in a client note. “Too, if policy is set optimally, it should return the economy to a favorable place over time.”

Still Feroli expects the Fed on have to follow up Wednesday’s action with a similar-sized move at the Nov. 6-7 meeting unless the labor market reverses a slowing paragon that began in April.

There was some good news on the jobs front Thursday, as the Labor Department accounted that weekly claims for unemployment benefits slid to 219,000, the lowest since May.

An unusual move lower

The half proportion point — or 50 basis point — cut was remarkable in that it’s the first time the Fed has gone beyond its traditional quarter-point pull up stakes absent a looming recession or crisis.

Though Powell did not give credence to the notion that the move was a makeup telephone call for not cutting at the July meeting, speculation on Wall Street was that the central bank indeed was playing catch-up to some condition.

“This is a matter of maybe he felt like they were getting a little bit behind,” said Dan North, elder economist for North America at Allianz Trade. “A 50 basis point cut is pretty unusual. It’s been a long stretch, and I think it was maybe the last labor market report that gave him pause.”

Indeed, Powell has made no unpublishable of his concerns about the labor market, and stated Wednesday that getting in front of a potential weakening was an important motivator behind the recalibration.

“The Fed until this sees the economy as healthy and the labor market as solid, but Powell noted that it is time to recalibrate policy,” send a lettered Seth Carpenter, chief global economist at Morgan Stanley. “Powell has stressed and proven with this merit cut that the FOMC is willing to move gradually or make bigger moves depending on the incoming data and evolution of risks.”

Fundstrat's Tom Lee on where investors should be positioned right now

Don’t miss these insights from CNBC PRO

Check Also

Tesla drops 6% after BYD partners with DeepSeek, Musk adds to DOGE distractions with OpenAI bid

Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk joins U.S. President Donald Trump during an foreman order …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *