WEBVTT - Instant Reaction: Powell Defends 50 Point Rate Cut

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<v Speaker 1>Bloomberg Audio Studios, Podcasts, Radio News.

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<v Speaker 2>Good afternoon for our audience worldwide, Welcome to the program,

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<v Speaker 2>a special edition of Bloomberg Surveillance on a Federal Reserve decision.

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<v Speaker 2>The decision as follows, a fifty basis point cut with

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<v Speaker 2>a sprinkle of descent. Your ecory market on the S

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<v Speaker 2>and P five hundreds still just about firmer. But rolling

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<v Speaker 2>over in that news conference, we're now firmer by just

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<v Speaker 2>a quarter of one percent on a Russell, still elevated

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<v Speaker 2>up by more than one full percentage point straight out

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<v Speaker 2>of the gate in that news conference. Framing policy recalibration

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<v Speaker 2>something he said multiple times, a process that evolves over time.

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<v Speaker 2>Take a listen to what the Chairman had to say

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<v Speaker 2>on the path forward.

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<v Speaker 3>I do not think that anyone should look at this

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<v Speaker 3>and say, oh, this is the new pace. You know,

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<v Speaker 3>you have to have to think about it in terms

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<v Speaker 3>of the base case. Of course, what happens will happen.

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<v Speaker 3>In the base case. What you see is look at

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<v Speaker 3>the SEP. You see cuts moving along. The sense of

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<v Speaker 3>this is we're recalibrating policy down over time to a

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<v Speaker 3>more neutral level, and we're moving at the pace that

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<v Speaker 3>we think is.

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<v Speaker 2>Appropriate recalibration on repeat, Lisa looking forward to meeting by mating,

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<v Speaker 2>this is not the new pace. That's something he puts

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<v Speaker 2>some weights on, some emphasis in that news conference.

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<v Speaker 1>And if you were basically judging his news conference based

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<v Speaker 1>on the stock reaction, there's a little wobble after that statement,

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<v Speaker 1>and even more of a wabble after you really addressed

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<v Speaker 1>the idea of a neutral race. He told it a

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<v Speaker 1>sense of neutral, whatever that may be. And he said

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<v Speaker 1>that my own sense is we're not going back to

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<v Speaker 1>that nehru time or that negative rate, very low rate time.

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<v Speaker 1>Neutral rate is probably much higher. You saw a reaction there,

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<v Speaker 1>but then people shook it off and said, hey, he's

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<v Speaker 1>got our back.

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<v Speaker 4>I look, John, I strapped a fibonacci across this, and

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<v Speaker 4>from where we were to the midpoint of the pandemic

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<v Speaker 4>low is two and seven eighths. He is correct. It's

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<v Speaker 4>just a nudge in the distance to travel just to

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<v Speaker 4>get back to the midpoint.

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<v Speaker 5>Call it normal.

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<v Speaker 4>It's a lot longer than the job owning in the

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<v Speaker 4>press conference that we just saw.

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<v Speaker 2>We're lucky to have Mohammad alongside us. He won't say

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<v Speaker 2>mission accomplished. He refused to say in this news conference,

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<v Speaker 2>But we've got to ask, isn't it implied?

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<v Speaker 6>Listen to this.

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<v Speaker 2>The labor market conditions are pretty close to maximum employment.

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<v Speaker 2>Retail sales GDPs show the economy is growing at a

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<v Speaker 2>solid pace. We're not seeing rising layoffs or hearing it

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<v Speaker 2>from companies. It's time to support the labor market when

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<v Speaker 2>it's strong. That's what we're trying to do. Is that

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<v Speaker 2>mission accomplished? Isn't it implied?

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<v Speaker 7>Yeah?

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<v Speaker 6>I mean Jason Furman put it as well as anybody

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<v Speaker 6>can when he said if you look at the projection,

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<v Speaker 6>and now if you listen to his statement, it is

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<v Speaker 6>and I'm quoting him, just about the closest thing to

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<v Speaker 6>mission accomplished banner that you can imagine them unfiling. So

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<v Speaker 6>I think it is the hard thing for Power is

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<v Speaker 6>that we're not just recalibrating policy. We're recalibrating what we

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<v Speaker 6>mean by a fifty basis point cut. You don't start

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<v Speaker 6>a fifty basis point cycle with a fifty basis point

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<v Speaker 6>cut and say at the same time, the economy is

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<v Speaker 6>in good place. And that's what he had to navigate

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<v Speaker 6>all the time. If the economy is in a good place,

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<v Speaker 6>why are starting with fifty basis points? And it was

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<v Speaker 6>harder for him to reconcile it too, because he didn't

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<v Speaker 6>want to acknowledge that keeping weights unchanged in July was

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<v Speaker 6>a mistake. So that's the tension that played throughout the

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<v Speaker 6>press conference.

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<v Speaker 2>He did mention that if they had that Job's report

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<v Speaker 2>before that mating in July, that maybe they would have

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<v Speaker 2>gone twenty five at that mate, take what did you

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<v Speaker 2>make of that?

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<v Speaker 1>I made of that this idea that what does he

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<v Speaker 1>mean about the totality of data? And he didn't talk

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<v Speaker 1>about data dependency in quite the same way when he started.

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<v Speaker 1>When he was asked by our own Michael McKee about

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<v Speaker 1>what he was looking for and how much he seems

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<v Speaker 1>to be reconciling something, he didn't have a real clear

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<v Speaker 1>view on that. What is the data we're looking at now?

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<v Speaker 1>Is it basically revisions to the jobs numbers that we're getting,

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<v Speaker 1>as well as potentially the Beige Book.

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<v Speaker 2>You've said this a few times. Revisions seems to be

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<v Speaker 2>more weight now in revisions, and I think over the

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<v Speaker 2>last few news conferences now he's basically said, whatever payrolls is,

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<v Speaker 2>he thinks he's overstating jobs growth in this country, which.

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<v Speaker 1>Has been just the truth over the past couple of

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<v Speaker 1>months and frankly more than a year. Typically, when you

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<v Speaker 1>get a weakening labor market, the data that you get

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<v Speaker 1>initially is stronger than what you get on the revisions downward.

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<v Speaker 1>But just to build the idea of mission accomplished, he

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<v Speaker 1>kept saying that the only reason he could really make

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<v Speaker 1>a commitment to fifty basis points is we are committed

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<v Speaker 1>to coming up with a good outcome. He came up

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<v Speaker 1>with lots of He went to the thesaurus of outsoft landing,

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<v Speaker 1>but that was really where he was heading.

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<v Speaker 2>Joining us now to discuss the continue the conversation built

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<v Speaker 2>down to be the former New York Fed president and

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<v Speaker 2>Bloomberg Economics senior advisor, billing your piece before this decision

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<v Speaker 2>on Bloomberg opinion, you said the Fed should go big.

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<v Speaker 2>Now I think it will it did. What did you

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<v Speaker 2>think of what you heard this afternoon?

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<v Speaker 7>It's pretty much what I was expecting in the sense

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<v Speaker 7>that one of the issues that Paul had is how

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<v Speaker 7>do you two fifty without scaring people that you know

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<v Speaker 7>something bad about the economy? And I think he did

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<v Speaker 7>that very well. He basically said we're doing this because

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<v Speaker 7>the news is good. We've made progress on inflation, as

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<v Speaker 7>opposed we're doing this because the news is bad. So

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<v Speaker 7>I thought it was a very uh, you know, providing

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<v Speaker 7>reassurance to people that thinks that they've they've got it.

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<v Speaker 7>You also, you know, when he's asked about, you know,

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<v Speaker 7>the Sam rule and the risks that the unemployment rate

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<v Speaker 7>could go up by quite a bit, more pretty reassuring

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<v Speaker 7>on that. You know, thinks that the labyer market can

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<v Speaker 7>stabilize close to where we are today, and that's really

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<v Speaker 7>hugely important because you know, if the layer of market

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<v Speaker 7>doesn't stabilize, then we will have them out recession and

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<v Speaker 7>then the FED will have to ease a lot more So,

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<v Speaker 7>I thought the general tone of the of the press

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<v Speaker 7>conference and the statement was we've got that, We've got it.

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<v Speaker 4>Bill. Congratulations your essay today. You think you were one

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<v Speaker 4>of the Fed whispers everybody's talking about out there right now.

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<v Speaker 4>Bill Dudley, I look at where we are and where

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<v Speaker 4>we're heading, and it simply comes down to the strength

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<v Speaker 4>of the American economy. Forgetting about the theater of recession.

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<v Speaker 4>Where does GDP settle, whether real GDP or nominal GDP.

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<v Speaker 4>How do you envision that in a year or even

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<v Speaker 4>two years.

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<v Speaker 7>I think if you look at the Fed's forecast and

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<v Speaker 7>look at how that growth affects the unemploying rate, the

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<v Speaker 7>FED thinks that, you know, growth in the medium term

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<v Speaker 7>is going to be two percent two percent plus at

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<v Speaker 7>annual which rates. So and that's sort of what we're

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<v Speaker 7>doing right now. So you know, the FED got a

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<v Speaker 7>sort of soft landing in place. If the commy continues

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<v Speaker 7>to growth at the same pace as it's doing right now,

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<v Speaker 7>the unemploying rate will stay relatively stable. You know, you

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<v Speaker 7>saw in the Summary of Economic Projections, the FED shows

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<v Speaker 7>a modest, very modest, further increase in the unemploying rate

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<v Speaker 7>of from four point two today to four point four percent,

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<v Speaker 7>but you know, nothing beyond that. So it's sort of

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<v Speaker 7>a soft you know, if you look at their forecast,

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<v Speaker 7>it's a soft landing kind of story, and you know,

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<v Speaker 7>I hope they could pull it off.

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<v Speaker 1>Right now, the stock market and the bod market are

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<v Speaker 1>trying to understand what the reaction function of the Federal

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<v Speaker 1>Reserve actually is and to which data they're going to

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<v Speaker 1>look at. It seemed like there was a renewed focus

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<v Speaker 1>on both jobs revisions as well as the Beige Book,

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<v Speaker 1>which was the input to potentially some of the heavier

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<v Speaker 1>weight on fifty basis points. Do you view that now

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<v Speaker 1>so as sort of these data points is taking on

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<v Speaker 1>outsized importance.

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<v Speaker 7>I think they are more focused on the liver market

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<v Speaker 7>because there has been deterioration in the labor market. I

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<v Speaker 7>think there are much more confident than inflation is going

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<v Speaker 7>to continue to come down because they've seen more slack

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<v Speaker 7>in the economy and the labor market. They've seen inflation

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<v Speaker 7>progress that we've already had, they've seen wage inflation moderating.

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<v Speaker 7>So I think their concerns are very much on the

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<v Speaker 7>labor market side.

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<v Speaker 8>So when I'm looking at the economic data right now,

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<v Speaker 8>I'm focused on the liver market data, and that will

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<v Speaker 8>determine whether, you know, we just get continued at a

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<v Speaker 8>relatively modest pace after this the twenty five basis point reductions,

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<v Speaker 8>which is essentially what was implied in the summary of

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<v Speaker 8>economic projections, or whether they'll become more concerned about downside

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<v Speaker 8>risk and then we'll have to get thrown a few fifties.

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<v Speaker 7>Bill.

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<v Speaker 6>Congratulations both on what you said they should do. And

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<v Speaker 6>what you said they would do. And part of your

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<v Speaker 6>argument was on the unemployment rate. So I want to

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<v Speaker 6>go back to that. There revision up to four point

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<v Speaker 6>four percent by the end of this year, stays at

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<v Speaker 6>four point four percent at the end of twenty twenty five.

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<v Speaker 6>Are you comfortable that we can stabilize here without the

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<v Speaker 6>tipping points that you were so worried about.

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<v Speaker 7>That's well, we're going to find out over the next year.

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<v Speaker 7>I mean, the somils are very simple, you know, tells

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<v Speaker 7>us a very simple story. When the unemployment rises beyond

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<v Speaker 7>a certain threshold, the next stop is a full long recession.

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<v Speaker 7>The question is what's the right threshold. Historically, the Sambrell

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<v Speaker 7>threshold has been a half a point rise in the

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<v Speaker 7>unemploying rate on a three month moving average basis over

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<v Speaker 7>the over twelve period. And we've already pierced that threshold.

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<v Speaker 7>So you have to believe that, you know, there is

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<v Speaker 7>some risk here. You know, Paul was asked about the

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<v Speaker 7>risk and you know, downside risk to the labor market,

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<v Speaker 7>and you sort of, you know, mostly dismissed that. But

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<v Speaker 7>I do think that I actually do think the risks

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<v Speaker 7>are you know, maybe at best they're balanced, But I

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<v Speaker 7>would actually be more concerned about the downside risk to

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<v Speaker 7>the labor market now than thee risk to inflation.

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<v Speaker 2>Bill, You'll always find a politician that's unhappy. I found one,

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<v Speaker 2>Senator Warren. This kind of interest rates has yet another

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<v Speaker 2>acknowledgement that power waited too long to reduce interest rates.

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<v Speaker 2>I do think the politics are relevant here. November seventh

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<v Speaker 2>will be the next meeting. We might have a decision

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<v Speaker 2>in hand by the American public as to who they'd

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<v Speaker 2>like the next president of the United States to be.

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<v Speaker 2>We might know the makeup of Congress as well. We

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<v Speaker 2>might have a better idea of what policy looks like

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<v Speaker 2>in twenty twenty five.

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<v Speaker 5>Bill, you've lift this.

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<v Speaker 2>You were on the FMC back in twenty sixteen, I believe,

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<v Speaker 2>can you walk me through your experience back then and

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<v Speaker 2>whether the same applies this time around.

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<v Speaker 7>I would be very surprised that the election outcome affected

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<v Speaker 7>what the FED does over the near term, because you know,

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<v Speaker 7>an election outcome is one thing, but what that incoming

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<v Speaker 7>president will be able to do with you know, as

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<v Speaker 7>closely divided Congress, Congress remains very uncertain, and so I

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<v Speaker 7>think the FED reacts to the world as it is

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<v Speaker 7>as opposed to speculates about how the world could be.

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<v Speaker 7>So I would be I would be very surprised if

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<v Speaker 7>the Fed doesn't cut rates at the November meeting. I mean,

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<v Speaker 7>if they don't cut rates of the November meeting, it's

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<v Speaker 7>because the economy is bounced back and very strong, or

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<v Speaker 7>the inflation news is really bad between now and then,

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<v Speaker 7>and that's not something I expect at this point. I

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<v Speaker 7>don't think that Powell expects it. I think, you know,

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<v Speaker 7>the odds of a twenty five basic point rate cut

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<v Speaker 7>in November are very very high, and if the economy shows,

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<v Speaker 7>you know, more weakness than maybe even fifty basis points.

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<v Speaker 2>I bill appreciate it as always built upley of Bloomberg

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<v Speaker 2>opinion the Fed should go big now I think it will.

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<v Speaker 2>It did it did about an hour and thirty minutes ago.

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<v Speaker 2>Let's bring Gid Michael McKee. He was in the news conference.

0:10:58.960 --> 0:11:01.360
<v Speaker 2>Mike McKee, I want your thoughts on that press conference

0:11:01.520 --> 0:11:03.120
<v Speaker 2>where there was a little bit of tension for you.

0:11:03.320 --> 0:11:04.560
<v Speaker 2>How did you walk out of this one?

0:11:06.280 --> 0:11:08.559
<v Speaker 9>Well, I don't think there was a huge amount of tension,

0:11:08.800 --> 0:11:11.040
<v Speaker 9>except for the fact that as you were just talking

0:11:11.040 --> 0:11:14.160
<v Speaker 9>about with Bill Dudley the idea that there is probably

0:11:14.160 --> 0:11:17.200
<v Speaker 9>more risk to the labor department, to the labor market

0:11:17.520 --> 0:11:20.760
<v Speaker 9>than the FED is letting on. And that's the concern.

0:11:21.160 --> 0:11:24.240
<v Speaker 9>And to get to my question at Lisa mentioned the

0:11:24.280 --> 0:11:29.720
<v Speaker 9>FED was data dependent until they were confident that inflation.

0:11:29.440 --> 0:11:30.760
<v Speaker 6>Was going to be down to target.

0:11:31.120 --> 0:11:35.199
<v Speaker 9>But how can they be data dependent on the unemployment rate?

0:11:35.240 --> 0:11:36.560
<v Speaker 9>We don't know what it's going to be, and as

0:11:36.600 --> 0:11:40.079
<v Speaker 9>Bill suggested, it could go up rapidly. Do we get

0:11:40.080 --> 0:11:43.679
<v Speaker 9>a rapid response then, especially since policy works with a lag,

0:11:43.920 --> 0:11:46.560
<v Speaker 9>it's a little unclear what their reaction function is going

0:11:46.600 --> 0:11:47.720
<v Speaker 9>to be going forward.

0:11:47.880 --> 0:11:50.040
<v Speaker 2>Might looking forward to catching up with you tomorrow. Lots

0:11:50.040 --> 0:11:52.640
<v Speaker 2>to talk about plenty more data just in the next

0:11:52.640 --> 0:11:54.840
<v Speaker 2>week or so. Equities right now on the SMP Lisa

0:11:54.920 --> 0:11:57.640
<v Speaker 2>firma by four tenths of one percent, the unperformance on

0:11:57.640 --> 0:11:59.000
<v Speaker 2>the small camps that you might expect.

0:11:59.120 --> 0:12:01.520
<v Speaker 1>Yeah, and the Fed basically gave this market what it

0:12:01.559 --> 0:12:03.880
<v Speaker 1>was looking for, and then some a question now of

0:12:03.920 --> 0:12:06.640
<v Speaker 1>just how much this market has moved ahead of what

0:12:06.679 --> 0:12:10.280
<v Speaker 1>the Fed has said. Mohammed, I would love your thoughts

0:12:10.400 --> 0:12:13.400
<v Speaker 1>on what the new data dependency actually is given the

0:12:13.400 --> 0:12:16.200
<v Speaker 1>fact that people are looking for a litmus test to

0:12:16.280 --> 0:12:19.280
<v Speaker 1>understand what the reaction function is of a FED. That

0:12:19.760 --> 0:12:23.320
<v Speaker 1>kind of is playing with what they get, which is

0:12:23.440 --> 0:12:25.160
<v Speaker 1>the same lack of clarity that we have.

0:12:25.880 --> 0:12:28.240
<v Speaker 6>Yeah, I think the data dependence all comes down to

0:12:28.280 --> 0:12:32.160
<v Speaker 6>the labor market, and he went through in detail a

0:12:32.240 --> 0:12:35.280
<v Speaker 6>number of indicators he looks at and when he says

0:12:35.320 --> 0:12:37.680
<v Speaker 6>the totality of the data, I think he really means

0:12:37.720 --> 0:12:41.360
<v Speaker 6>it when it comes to the labor market. Lisa, I'm

0:12:41.400 --> 0:12:43.520
<v Speaker 6>surprised you haven't picked up on the fixed income market

0:12:43.559 --> 0:12:46.200
<v Speaker 6>and what has happened to treasuries that they're now higher

0:12:46.240 --> 0:12:49.640
<v Speaker 6>on the day. There's been quite a move when this

0:12:49.760 --> 0:12:53.600
<v Speaker 6>statement was announced. The tenure went down to three sixty

0:12:53.600 --> 0:12:55.679
<v Speaker 6>four is currently trading at three seventy.

0:12:55.800 --> 0:12:58.120
<v Speaker 2>It's up six spaces points space. What do you think

0:12:58.120 --> 0:12:58.439
<v Speaker 2>that is?

0:12:59.200 --> 0:13:03.360
<v Speaker 6>I think they some and the curve has steepened. Two

0:13:03.440 --> 0:13:06.120
<v Speaker 6>stands are now nine basis points. I think there is

0:13:06.200 --> 0:13:09.840
<v Speaker 6>some concern as what does it mean longer term for inflation.

0:13:10.600 --> 0:13:13.560
<v Speaker 6>That's the only thing I can think of. But the

0:13:13.640 --> 0:13:16.800
<v Speaker 6>action has been really interesting, and once again you end

0:13:16.880 --> 0:13:19.440
<v Speaker 6>up in a different place after the press conference than

0:13:19.480 --> 0:13:20.679
<v Speaker 6>you wear after the statement.

0:13:21.000 --> 0:13:24.320
<v Speaker 4>Yes, no question about that I think of David Kelly

0:13:24.800 --> 0:13:27.240
<v Speaker 4>is JP Morgan. You know John, He's been very good

0:13:27.640 --> 0:13:30.560
<v Speaker 4>about a vector of nonfirm payrolls that gets you to

0:13:30.600 --> 0:13:33.839
<v Speaker 4>a negative statistic three month moving average about one hundred

0:13:33.840 --> 0:13:38.240
<v Speaker 4>and sixteen thousand. Nobody's modeling in here if this job

0:13:38.280 --> 0:13:41.720
<v Speaker 4>economy USANA one talks about continues to deteriorate.

0:13:41.880 --> 0:13:44.000
<v Speaker 2>So what are we saying here, Muhammed, We're willing to

0:13:44.040 --> 0:13:47.520
<v Speaker 2>accept three the high twos, or we're worried about going

0:13:47.520 --> 0:13:50.200
<v Speaker 2>back to three point five push in four? What's the

0:13:50.240 --> 0:13:50.840
<v Speaker 2>story here?

0:13:51.280 --> 0:13:54.280
<v Speaker 6>So we cannot answer that story without bringing in fiscal policy,

0:13:54.320 --> 0:13:56.640
<v Speaker 6>without bringing in structural reforms. I mean, that's the trap

0:13:56.679 --> 0:13:59.600
<v Speaker 6>we have all fallen into. That we still think of

0:13:59.640 --> 0:14:01.760
<v Speaker 6>the FED is the only game in town. But does

0:14:01.840 --> 0:14:06.080
<v Speaker 6>other things happening that that speak to? What is that weight?

0:14:06.160 --> 0:14:07.760
<v Speaker 6>And that's why the wage is so wide?

0:14:08.160 --> 0:14:10.560
<v Speaker 1>You brought this up actually when j Powell said this

0:14:11.160 --> 0:14:13.880
<v Speaker 1>over time and we're going to get down to two

0:14:13.880 --> 0:14:17.720
<v Speaker 1>percent over time, it raises this question, especially as he

0:14:17.800 --> 0:14:20.840
<v Speaker 1>talks about not mission accomplished but sort of you know,

0:14:21.280 --> 0:14:22.480
<v Speaker 1>wishing to wash plist.

0:14:22.640 --> 0:14:26.360
<v Speaker 5>But this idea that we could I'm going to ask

0:14:26.400 --> 0:14:27.360
<v Speaker 5>you to say that again.

0:14:27.240 --> 0:14:31.840
<v Speaker 1>Please, but this idea that you know, he's so excited

0:14:31.840 --> 0:14:35.360
<v Speaker 1>about the idea of a soft landing that it will okay,

0:14:35.400 --> 0:14:37.920
<v Speaker 1>it's okay for it to take a number of years

0:14:37.920 --> 0:14:39.360
<v Speaker 1>to get back to that two percent target.

0:14:39.400 --> 0:14:40.840
<v Speaker 6>And that's in the projections. I'm going to have him

0:14:40.840 --> 0:14:42.440
<v Speaker 6>in front of me, he said, co PC Right now,

0:14:42.480 --> 0:14:45.800
<v Speaker 6>it's two point seven. They're projected at two point six

0:14:45.960 --> 0:14:48.360
<v Speaker 6>at the end of this year, two point two at

0:14:48.360 --> 0:14:50.760
<v Speaker 6>then of next year, and two by twenty twenty six.

0:14:50.840 --> 0:14:53.120
<v Speaker 6>We basically pushed back the target.

0:14:53.280 --> 0:14:55.600
<v Speaker 4>I like what you said about mission accomplish, and it's

0:14:55.640 --> 0:14:58.920
<v Speaker 4>this terror of getting this wrong, whether you're a governor

0:14:59.000 --> 0:15:04.160
<v Speaker 4>or president. Chairman. Jason Furman out teaching AC ten up

0:15:04.200 --> 0:15:07.120
<v Speaker 4>at Harvard and he was lectured by his daughter John.

0:15:07.240 --> 0:15:09.800
<v Speaker 4>We got a tweet out from Jason Furman where his

0:15:09.920 --> 0:15:13.080
<v Speaker 4>daughter walked in and said to Professor Furman, you were wrong.

0:15:13.200 --> 0:15:15.040
<v Speaker 4>There's a lot of that going on right now.

0:15:15.320 --> 0:15:16.960
<v Speaker 2>A lot of people were wrong. I think we should

0:15:16.960 --> 0:15:19.560
<v Speaker 2>pointing this out. The market was priced for something closer

0:15:19.560 --> 0:15:22.920
<v Speaker 2>to fifty than twenty five. The overwhelming majority of economists

0:15:22.960 --> 0:15:25.360
<v Speaker 2>in our survey, and we surveyed more than one hundred

0:15:25.600 --> 0:15:28.480
<v Speaker 2>not even ten percent of them saw fifty. So shout

0:15:28.480 --> 0:15:30.600
<v Speaker 2>out Mike Faroli over a JP Morgan, one of the

0:15:30.720 --> 0:15:32.840
<v Speaker 2>very few together without a one guy belief over at

0:15:32.840 --> 0:15:35.520
<v Speaker 2>Bloomberg Economics, who we're looking for that fifty today.

0:15:35.640 --> 0:15:35.840
<v Speaker 6>Yeah.

0:15:35.880 --> 0:15:38.360
<v Speaker 1>Deutsche Back actually did an informal survey also that they

0:15:38.360 --> 0:15:40.760
<v Speaker 1>put out today, and something like sixty one percent roughly

0:15:40.800 --> 0:15:43.480
<v Speaker 1>and plus remnus a half a percent came out saying

0:15:43.480 --> 0:15:45.200
<v Speaker 1>that it was twenty five basis points. So this really

0:15:45.280 --> 0:15:47.320
<v Speaker 1>was kind of on the back foot.

0:15:47.360 --> 0:15:49.240
<v Speaker 4>I kept it quiet. Nobody cares what they think, but

0:15:49.280 --> 0:15:50.640
<v Speaker 4>the fact is I was wrong.

0:15:51.040 --> 0:15:53.360
<v Speaker 2>Jeff Rosenberger black Rock joins us now for more. He

0:15:53.400 --> 0:15:55.440
<v Speaker 2>wasn't wrong if you were waiting impatiently to give us

0:15:55.480 --> 0:15:57.800
<v Speaker 2>his views on this. Jeff, let's talk about the bond market,

0:15:57.840 --> 0:15:59.680
<v Speaker 2>and you can throw in your thoughts on this Federal Reserve.

0:15:59.720 --> 0:16:02.200
<v Speaker 2>To say, the projections in the news conference as well,

0:16:02.400 --> 0:16:05.200
<v Speaker 2>the botmarket's sunning golf. The thirty years up seven basis points,

0:16:05.200 --> 0:16:07.520
<v Speaker 2>the ten year is up six. What do you think

0:16:07.520 --> 0:16:08.040
<v Speaker 2>that signal was?

0:16:08.120 --> 0:16:08.400
<v Speaker 5>Jeff?

0:16:09.960 --> 0:16:13.120
<v Speaker 10>Yeah, I think the important point here is that there's

0:16:13.320 --> 0:16:16.040
<v Speaker 10>the action and the fifty basis points, and then there's

0:16:16.040 --> 0:16:19.080
<v Speaker 10>the expectation and what was priced in. And so while

0:16:19.120 --> 0:16:21.920
<v Speaker 10>the bond market was leaning towards the fifty basis points,

0:16:22.040 --> 0:16:25.480
<v Speaker 10>it was really more about that segment Jonathan of the

0:16:25.480 --> 0:16:27.000
<v Speaker 10>press conference that you highlighted.

0:16:27.040 --> 0:16:27.960
<v Speaker 5>I had it written in my.

0:16:28.000 --> 0:16:31.480
<v Speaker 10>Notes as well, the interchange where Powell said, you know,

0:16:31.560 --> 0:16:34.800
<v Speaker 10>don't take that fifty basis points as the new you

0:16:34.840 --> 0:16:38.200
<v Speaker 10>know pace, and he pushed back against you know, this

0:16:38.240 --> 0:16:40.120
<v Speaker 10>is going to be followed by he got several questions

0:16:40.120 --> 0:16:42.320
<v Speaker 10>on more fifties the problem, and I think to I

0:16:42.360 --> 0:16:45.720
<v Speaker 10>answer a bit of Muhammad's question, your question to Muhammad

0:16:45.720 --> 0:16:49.200
<v Speaker 10>and that interchange is that the bond market was pricing

0:16:49.240 --> 0:16:54.400
<v Speaker 10>in more subsequent fifties and into twenty twenty five still

0:16:54.480 --> 0:16:57.120
<v Speaker 10>is pricing in bigger increases than what you're getting in

0:16:57.200 --> 0:17:00.480
<v Speaker 10>the sep and Powell and the press conference really pushed

0:17:00.520 --> 0:17:01.320
<v Speaker 10>back against that.

0:17:01.480 --> 0:17:03.160
<v Speaker 5>So I think you have two things going on.

0:17:04.040 --> 0:17:08.600
<v Speaker 10>I'm very amenable to Mohammad and Lisa's comments that you know,

0:17:08.680 --> 0:17:10.399
<v Speaker 10>maybe this is a little bit of a sign of

0:17:10.720 --> 0:17:13.240
<v Speaker 10>inflation and some of those concerns what you're seeing in gold,

0:17:13.440 --> 0:17:16.119
<v Speaker 10>but it's also I think in the immediacy this is

0:17:16.119 --> 0:17:19.159
<v Speaker 10>a little bit disappointing relative to what's been built up

0:17:19.240 --> 0:17:22.520
<v Speaker 10>in bond expectations, and that from a broader perspective is

0:17:22.520 --> 0:17:25.720
<v Speaker 10>really an important point from an investment perspective that you

0:17:25.800 --> 0:17:26.159
<v Speaker 10>can have.

0:17:26.280 --> 0:17:27.240
<v Speaker 5>Here's the headline.

0:17:27.359 --> 0:17:30.000
<v Speaker 10>Fed cuts interest rates by fifty basis points and the

0:17:30.040 --> 0:17:32.520
<v Speaker 10>bond market returns are going to be negative today. So

0:17:32.560 --> 0:17:36.040
<v Speaker 10>it's not just you know, the action I can anticipate,

0:17:36.359 --> 0:17:37.600
<v Speaker 10>you know, the fence cutting rates.

0:17:37.640 --> 0:17:39.879
<v Speaker 5>It's time to back up the truck in terms of duration.

0:17:40.359 --> 0:17:43.320
<v Speaker 10>The problem is it's also a lot in the price,

0:17:43.400 --> 0:17:46.639
<v Speaker 10>so they've got to over deliver, and they didn't do

0:17:46.760 --> 0:17:49.200
<v Speaker 10>that relative to bond expectations. And that's why I think

0:17:49.200 --> 0:17:51.879
<v Speaker 10>you're seeing a little bit of that disappointment out of

0:17:51.880 --> 0:17:55.600
<v Speaker 10>fixed income markets and they're read on today's decision.

0:17:55.720 --> 0:17:58.280
<v Speaker 1>Jeff Muhammad scolded me because frankly, I wasn't paying enough

0:17:58.280 --> 0:18:00.639
<v Speaker 1>attention to the bond market. The bond market is speaking,

0:18:00.640 --> 0:18:02.639
<v Speaker 1>and the ten year note is speaking, and what it

0:18:02.680 --> 0:18:05.560
<v Speaker 1>is saying is it at least has a higher yield.

0:18:05.560 --> 0:18:07.439
<v Speaker 1>But we are speaking to the bond market right now.

0:18:07.520 --> 0:18:10.040
<v Speaker 1>Jeff Rosenberg, what is your reaction function? Does this make

0:18:10.400 --> 0:18:13.920
<v Speaker 1>you less interested on the margins in buying ten year

0:18:14.119 --> 0:18:16.280
<v Speaker 1>or twenty year or thirty year treasuries.

0:18:17.560 --> 0:18:20.040
<v Speaker 10>Yeah, you know, I've said in lots of different context

0:18:20.119 --> 0:18:22.840
<v Speaker 10>with you guys that you have to just be careful

0:18:23.000 --> 0:18:25.720
<v Speaker 10>about where you want to own your fixed income, that

0:18:26.240 --> 0:18:30.640
<v Speaker 10>the yield curve move can be more important, more determinant

0:18:30.680 --> 0:18:33.359
<v Speaker 10>to your fixed income returns than just the direction of

0:18:33.359 --> 0:18:35.439
<v Speaker 10>interest rates. A lot of times we just think about,

0:18:35.600 --> 0:18:37.520
<v Speaker 10>you want to own bonds when rates are going down

0:18:37.520 --> 0:18:40.080
<v Speaker 10>when the fed's cutting. You don't want to own bonds

0:18:40.760 --> 0:18:45.320
<v Speaker 10>when they're hiking. But because the curve is so flat.

0:18:45.400 --> 0:18:46.840
<v Speaker 5>We're off the peak of inversions.

0:18:46.880 --> 0:18:50.159
<v Speaker 10>But it's still a historic lack of premium in that

0:18:50.240 --> 0:18:53.040
<v Speaker 10>back end of the curve. That where you hold your

0:18:53.119 --> 0:18:55.480
<v Speaker 10>duration is going to matter as much as how much

0:18:55.560 --> 0:18:58.760
<v Speaker 10>duration you hold. So it's still that story for me.

0:18:58.920 --> 0:19:01.440
<v Speaker 10>It's still the front end is a little bit better

0:19:01.560 --> 0:19:04.040
<v Speaker 10>five years and in you want to be careful about

0:19:04.040 --> 0:19:06.480
<v Speaker 10>that term premium. And the other thing that I'm highlighting

0:19:06.480 --> 0:19:08.439
<v Speaker 10>here today is you just got to be careful about

0:19:08.720 --> 0:19:09.560
<v Speaker 10>how much is.

0:19:09.520 --> 0:19:10.479
<v Speaker 5>Already priced in.

0:19:10.560 --> 0:19:13.679
<v Speaker 10>This is unique about the beginning of a FED cutting cycle.

0:19:13.720 --> 0:19:17.600
<v Speaker 10>We're about twice the amount of expected cuts priced at

0:19:17.600 --> 0:19:18.320
<v Speaker 10>the onset.

0:19:18.800 --> 0:19:21.400
<v Speaker 5>This was John Otter's article.

0:19:21.119 --> 0:19:23.760
<v Speaker 10>In Bloomberg, he highlighted this, it's a great chart, about

0:19:23.800 --> 0:19:27.959
<v Speaker 10>twice the amount of historic FED pricing about over two

0:19:28.000 --> 0:19:31.200
<v Speaker 10>and a half over two one hundred basis points, whereas

0:19:31.400 --> 0:19:33.440
<v Speaker 10>historically you come in and there's only about one hundred

0:19:33.440 --> 0:19:36.359
<v Speaker 10>basis points, so a lot is expected. It raises the

0:19:36.359 --> 0:19:39.800
<v Speaker 10>bar for subsequent fixed income performance. We've had a great run,

0:19:40.080 --> 0:19:42.600
<v Speaker 10>but that tells you a lot of the performances in

0:19:42.640 --> 0:19:44.359
<v Speaker 10>the rear view mirror, and so you got to be

0:19:44.520 --> 0:19:47.320
<v Speaker 10>more thoughtful about where you own that duration around the

0:19:47.400 --> 0:19:49.320
<v Speaker 10>curve when we look forward.

0:19:49.600 --> 0:19:51.520
<v Speaker 1>Does it give you more confidence though to go into risk?

0:19:51.600 --> 0:19:56.240
<v Speaker 10>Jeff, Well, you know, I think the FED did its best.

0:19:56.320 --> 0:19:58.520
<v Speaker 10>And that was the interchange you just had with Dudley

0:19:58.760 --> 0:19:59.640
<v Speaker 10>the press conference.

0:19:59.720 --> 0:20:00.680
<v Speaker 5>Channel lenge was.

0:20:00.600 --> 0:20:05.320
<v Speaker 10>Give fifty without spooking the market. I think they're successful

0:20:05.400 --> 0:20:09.040
<v Speaker 10>today in there. That's the response in terms of small caps.

0:20:09.080 --> 0:20:12.080
<v Speaker 10>You only buy small caps when the fence cutting rates,

0:20:12.119 --> 0:20:15.439
<v Speaker 10>when you believe in the soft landing and the denominator effect,

0:20:15.480 --> 0:20:18.200
<v Speaker 10>the discount rate is dominating, you know, any of your

0:20:18.240 --> 0:20:19.520
<v Speaker 10>concerns in terms of growth.

0:20:19.520 --> 0:20:22.080
<v Speaker 5>So I think they navigated that pretty well.

0:20:22.160 --> 0:20:24.720
<v Speaker 10>I think when you go forward, you know it is

0:20:24.760 --> 0:20:28.560
<v Speaker 10>a soft landing baseline. I think that's exactly what the

0:20:28.600 --> 0:20:31.320
<v Speaker 10>SEP is saying. When you look at all of the

0:20:31.359 --> 0:20:34.840
<v Speaker 10>other economic data outside of the labor market data, you know,

0:20:34.880 --> 0:20:37.879
<v Speaker 10>it's all very good. It's all very supportive for risky

0:20:37.920 --> 0:20:41.240
<v Speaker 10>assets and the fixed income side. That's a carry story.

0:20:41.520 --> 0:20:44.040
<v Speaker 10>We're pretty comfortable with that. You got to be a

0:20:44.040 --> 0:20:46.320
<v Speaker 10>little bit careful that it's a symmetric that a very

0:20:46.359 --> 0:20:48.680
<v Speaker 10>tight spreads any sign of recession.

0:20:49.080 --> 0:20:51.119
<v Speaker 5>And I don't think we're really seeing.

0:20:51.119 --> 0:20:54.439
<v Speaker 10>The recessionary signs out of the labor markets, but you

0:20:54.520 --> 0:20:56.920
<v Speaker 10>have to be cogniz of it that that is the

0:20:56.960 --> 0:20:58.960
<v Speaker 10>one place where you're seeing some weakness.

0:20:59.160 --> 0:21:01.440
<v Speaker 5>But I think this is still supportive to risky assets.

0:21:01.480 --> 0:21:04.560
<v Speaker 2>It just quickly Jeff November seventh, how different is that

0:21:04.600 --> 0:21:07.600
<v Speaker 2>committee meeting going to be compared to this one?

0:21:08.600 --> 0:21:11.560
<v Speaker 10>Well, you know, as you pointed out, you know you're

0:21:11.600 --> 0:21:14.040
<v Speaker 10>coming on the back side of the election. But you know,

0:21:14.320 --> 0:21:17.160
<v Speaker 10>as Powell answered, they're going to try to avoid any

0:21:17.240 --> 0:21:19.040
<v Speaker 10>kind of discussion on that. It's really going to be

0:21:19.080 --> 0:21:21.280
<v Speaker 10>about the evolution of the data. You know, the interesting

0:21:21.359 --> 0:21:23.800
<v Speaker 10>data point in terms of revisions. You know, we talk

0:21:23.880 --> 0:21:27.280
<v Speaker 10>about data dependence The problem is that data we're dependent

0:21:27.280 --> 0:21:28.600
<v Speaker 10>on is not very dependable.

0:21:29.040 --> 0:21:30.280
<v Speaker 5>Try that out slowly.

0:21:31.119 --> 0:21:33.800
<v Speaker 10>But that's the payroll data, right, and so the revisions

0:21:33.800 --> 0:21:34.600
<v Speaker 10>are going to be important.

0:21:34.600 --> 0:21:36.240
<v Speaker 5>We're going to have another one that's going.

0:21:36.160 --> 0:21:40.040
<v Speaker 10>To dictate a lot of the discussion without a deceleration.

0:21:40.440 --> 0:21:42.440
<v Speaker 10>I don't think you're going to be talking about fifties,

0:21:42.520 --> 0:21:44.960
<v Speaker 10>but they've clearly laid the groundwork here for a twenty

0:21:45.000 --> 0:21:48.040
<v Speaker 10>five in November, twenty five in December. That's what I

0:21:48.080 --> 0:21:51.360
<v Speaker 10>think is will price back into the bond market. That's

0:21:51.359 --> 0:21:53.440
<v Speaker 10>why you're seeing a little bit higher rates. If they

0:21:53.480 --> 0:21:56.400
<v Speaker 10>deliver on that, then there won't be as much surprise

0:21:56.560 --> 0:21:58.399
<v Speaker 10>or anticipation as we had in this meeting.

0:21:58.640 --> 0:22:00.880
<v Speaker 6>So Jeff, let me ask the question that I suspect

0:22:00.880 --> 0:22:05.280
<v Speaker 6>you hate being asked. And let's assume that you're being

0:22:05.280 --> 0:22:08.840
<v Speaker 6>asked for a retail investor sixty forty simple portfolio. What

0:22:08.920 --> 0:22:11.119
<v Speaker 6>should they do now given everything you've.

0:22:11.000 --> 0:22:15.159
<v Speaker 10>Just said, Yeah, I mean, the part of this discussion

0:22:15.240 --> 0:22:18.240
<v Speaker 10>around the forty, around the fixed income piece, Mohammed is

0:22:18.480 --> 0:22:21.679
<v Speaker 10>is that it's not the old sixty forty. It's not

0:22:21.920 --> 0:22:26.520
<v Speaker 10>this era where bond volatility is three percent. Bond volatility

0:22:26.560 --> 0:22:30.240
<v Speaker 10>is six to eight percent in the post COVID environment.

0:22:30.600 --> 0:22:33.280
<v Speaker 10>So the forty side is really where we've got to

0:22:33.320 --> 0:22:35.919
<v Speaker 10>do some rethinking, and that's where we talk about.

0:22:35.640 --> 0:22:38.200
<v Speaker 5>Diversifying your diversifiers.

0:22:37.600 --> 0:22:40.800
<v Speaker 10>Thinking about different ways of finding ballast in your portfolio

0:22:41.240 --> 0:22:44.400
<v Speaker 10>because of the uncertainty of how duration and risk free

0:22:44.480 --> 0:22:47.920
<v Speaker 10>rates are going to perform in a more inflation uncertain environment.

0:22:47.960 --> 0:22:50.119
<v Speaker 10>That's the points about the yield curve and what's already

0:22:50.119 --> 0:22:52.240
<v Speaker 10>priced in. So I think in that sixty forty it's

0:22:52.280 --> 0:22:57.439
<v Speaker 10>really about, you know, using different ways to find diversification

0:22:57.840 --> 0:23:01.199
<v Speaker 10>and diversifying that forty bucket away from kind of just

0:23:01.240 --> 0:23:02.639
<v Speaker 10>piling into traditional duration.

0:23:02.760 --> 0:23:05.520
<v Speaker 6>Did I hear you say a more inflation uncertain environment?

0:23:06.600 --> 0:23:07.520
<v Speaker 5>That is what I said.

0:23:07.600 --> 0:23:10.119
<v Speaker 6>Yes, I don't think that's what Pole thinks.

0:23:11.720 --> 0:23:15.159
<v Speaker 10>There's greater confidence that inflation is on a path to

0:23:15.280 --> 0:23:18.399
<v Speaker 10>returning to two percent, but we're not at two percent

0:23:18.480 --> 0:23:21.000
<v Speaker 10>and that path, as we saw in the interchange, the

0:23:21.040 --> 0:23:25.520
<v Speaker 10>shelter inflation, the uncertainty around how far we're going, and

0:23:25.560 --> 0:23:29.080
<v Speaker 10>the wage inflation picture. Right, there's a lot of confidence

0:23:29.080 --> 0:23:32.240
<v Speaker 10>that we're moving towards there, but we're not quite there yet.

0:23:32.280 --> 0:23:36.520
<v Speaker 10>That's the point about a more uncertain inflationary environment, and

0:23:36.560 --> 0:23:40.080
<v Speaker 10>with respect to kind of negative stockbond correlation, which is

0:23:40.160 --> 0:23:40.640
<v Speaker 10>really the.

0:23:40.680 --> 0:23:42.879
<v Speaker 5>Driver of the sixty forty part.

0:23:43.040 --> 0:23:46.080
<v Speaker 10>The challenge is that was really working well in your

0:23:46.119 --> 0:23:50.280
<v Speaker 10>portfolio when inflation was missing from below. Inflation is still

0:23:50.280 --> 0:23:53.399
<v Speaker 10>missing from above, and until you get back to the

0:23:53.440 --> 0:23:56.520
<v Speaker 10>period where we have too little inflation, you're not really

0:23:56.560 --> 0:24:00.160
<v Speaker 10>back to that halcyon days of fixed income in sixty forty.

0:24:00.240 --> 0:24:03.280
<v Speaker 2>Jeff, this was perfect. Thank you, sir, Jeff Rosenberg. There

0:24:03.440 --> 0:24:05.760
<v Speaker 2>of black rock on the Federal Reserve decision. If you

0:24:05.800 --> 0:24:07.639
<v Speaker 2>are just joining us, welcome to the program. It's a

0:24:07.640 --> 0:24:10.560
<v Speaker 2>fifty basis point CUD from the Federal Reserve with some descent,

0:24:10.920 --> 0:24:13.639
<v Speaker 2>the first descent we've seen from a sitting governor on

0:24:13.640 --> 0:24:16.399
<v Speaker 2>the FMC going all the way back to two thousand

0:24:16.480 --> 0:24:19.560
<v Speaker 2>and five Governor Mickey Bowman. Not a surprise for many

0:24:19.560 --> 0:24:21.240
<v Speaker 2>of you who's followed some of those speeches over the

0:24:21.320 --> 0:24:23.679
<v Speaker 2>last month or so. If you're looking at the equity market,

0:24:23.840 --> 0:24:26.399
<v Speaker 2>just about just about attempting to hold on to an

0:24:26.440 --> 0:24:28.800
<v Speaker 2>eighth day of gains on a S and P five hundred,

0:24:29.000 --> 0:24:31.199
<v Speaker 2>and it's a struggle. We turned slightly negative on the

0:24:31.240 --> 0:24:33.920
<v Speaker 2>SMP on the NASNAK one hundred, we're negative by zero

0:24:34.000 --> 0:24:37.639
<v Speaker 2>point zero five percent. Mohammed, just a final thought what

0:24:37.760 --> 0:24:40.560
<v Speaker 2>I heard from you, then, if you have any confidence

0:24:40.600 --> 0:24:43.000
<v Speaker 2>the inflation story is done, that we're on a one

0:24:43.040 --> 0:24:45.040
<v Speaker 2>way trip now back to neutral, which might be around

0:24:45.080 --> 0:24:48.440
<v Speaker 2>three percent, are you suggesting that confidence might be misplaced?

0:24:48.680 --> 0:24:51.360
<v Speaker 6>I think it's too early to declare mission accomplished. We've

0:24:51.400 --> 0:24:55.240
<v Speaker 6>come a long way, but their inherent contradiction that still

0:24:55.240 --> 0:24:58.040
<v Speaker 6>have to be sorted. John, this was historic. I mean,

0:24:58.080 --> 0:25:00.679
<v Speaker 6>we're going to look back on this day not only

0:25:00.720 --> 0:25:04.680
<v Speaker 6>as the beginning of the cutting cycle, but as having

0:25:04.720 --> 0:25:09.160
<v Speaker 6>we calibrated what we mean by fifty basis point start

0:25:09.280 --> 0:25:11.640
<v Speaker 6>to a cutting cycle. And we're going to look back

0:25:11.680 --> 0:25:14.520
<v Speaker 6>and either this will be the absolutely white bet, which

0:25:14.560 --> 0:25:17.879
<v Speaker 6>is be preemptive on the labor market after you were

0:25:18.000 --> 0:25:21.320
<v Speaker 6>reactive to inflation this is a fundamental change in their

0:25:21.320 --> 0:25:25.200
<v Speaker 6>reaction function. Or alternatively, we will look at this as

0:25:25.240 --> 0:25:28.199
<v Speaker 6>being too aggressive. I'm hoping that it will be the first,

0:25:29.160 --> 0:25:32.680
<v Speaker 6>because we all want the labor market to do well.

0:25:32.800 --> 0:25:34.880
<v Speaker 1>Of course, Michael B. Key asked for about being preemptive,

0:25:34.920 --> 0:25:37.520
<v Speaker 1>and he said data dependency or the totality of data

0:25:37.640 --> 0:25:39.320
<v Speaker 1>My big issue coming out of this is do we

0:25:39.400 --> 0:25:42.200
<v Speaker 1>understand the fed's reaction function more or do we understand

0:25:42.240 --> 0:25:43.600
<v Speaker 1>it less than we did before.

0:25:43.760 --> 0:25:45.240
<v Speaker 2>I think we've got a lot of questions that still

0:25:45.240 --> 0:25:47.440
<v Speaker 2>demand answers, and hopefully we'll get them over the next

0:25:47.440 --> 0:25:49.840
<v Speaker 2>few weeks, but I doubt it once that data starts

0:25:49.880 --> 0:25:51.600
<v Speaker 2>to come in. I'm looking forward to hearing from the

0:25:51.640 --> 0:25:53.960
<v Speaker 2>rest of the committee, aren't you. Oh yeah, over the

0:25:53.960 --> 0:25:54.720
<v Speaker 2>next few days.

0:25:54.760 --> 0:25:55.720
<v Speaker 1>It's quiet a sense.

0:25:55.920 --> 0:25:58.080
<v Speaker 2>Yeah, let's just see how close some of them were

0:25:58.320 --> 0:26:02.119
<v Speaker 2>to actually gun twenty five, not the fifty Mohammed Thank you,