Powell says energy spike manageable, warns inflation pressures remain

Source Cryptopolitan

Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell told Harvard students on Monday that he is completely fine holding interest rates where they are, even with oil rallying so unexpectedly throughout market sessions, thanks to the war America and Israel started with Iran.

Chair Powell said the plan right now is to wait and see how things play out, but as expected, the man also made it clear the Fed will not sit back if inflation starts sticking in people’s heads.

He said the real issue is what people start to believe about prices tomorrow. If businesses and households begin to expect things to keep getting more expensive, that is when the Fed has a problem.

“You can have a series of these supply shocks and that can lead the public generally to start expecting higher inflation over time. Why wouldn’t they?” said Powell.

Powell keeps rates steady while watching inflation expectations rise

Powell then explained that energy shocks usually pass and do not last forever, so central banks often wait instead of reacting fast.

He said officials are watching closely for any sign that people expect prices to keep rising. That includes companies setting prices and families planning their spending. If those expectations change, the Fed may have to step in, even if growth is weak.

The Fed then has to choose between fighting inflation or supporting growth, and the ever-so-vague-and-tactful Chair Powell did not give a clear answer on what the Fed will do if that moment comes.

He said, “We will eventually maybe face the question of what to do here. We’re not really facing it yet because we don’t know what the economic effects will be.” He said this while speaking to students at Harvard during a basic economics class.

Trump’s war in Iran has disrupted shipping through the critical Strait of Hormuz route, which is key for global oil flows. Inflation was already moving higher earlier this year before this shock hit, which makes things harder for the Fed.

At the March 18 meeting, the Fed voted 11 to 1 to keep rates between 3.5% and 3.75%. Stephen Miran was the only one who wanted a cut. After that meeting, Powell pushed back on forecasts from other officials that showed possible rate cuts later this year. He said those outlooks depend on inflation slowing again, which has not really happened since last summer.

As you likely know, Powell’s term ends May 15, and Kevin Warsh has been picked to replace him, but the Senate has not set a hearing date. Thom Tillis said he will block that process until a Justice Department probe into Powell is finished.

Powell said earlier this month he will stay on as chair pro tempore if no one is confirmed by then. He also said he will remain on the board until that investigation is done.

Oil prices fall as Trump signals possible end to Iran conflict

Meanwhile, Donald Trump said he is open to ending U.S. action tied to the conflict even if the Strait of Hormuz stays closed. He told aides that pushing Iran to reopen the route could drag the conflict out longer.

Markets reacted fast. West Texas Intermediate for May dropped 0.72% to $102.14 a barrel. Brent for May fell 1% to $111.55. Traders pulled back as they tried to figure out what would happen next.

Trump has been caught lying so many times its impossible to keep count. He has said talks are going well, to which Iranian officials have been mocking him on social media, saying they have not and will not respond to any of his calls as they don’t want to talk to the “Epstein class.”

Trump insists that he is telling the truth and even claimed again that they sent him ten boats of oil as a gift/show of good faith.

Shortly after, he was seen telling reporters Iran agreed to “most of” a 15-point ceasefire plan. Tehran pushed back and set its own conditions, including keeping control of the Strait of Hormuz.

There’s a middle ground between leaving money in the bank and rolling the dice in crypto. Start with this free video on decentralized finance.

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