WEBVTT - Instant Reaction: Jay Powell on the Fed Decision

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<v Speaker 1>Bloomberg Audio Studios, podcasts, radio news.

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<v Speaker 2>These always go on maybe one or two questions too long,

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<v Speaker 2>don't they.

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<v Speaker 3>That wraps up the first.

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<v Speaker 2>News conference with Chairman Power for twenty twenty five. If

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<v Speaker 2>you are just joining us, welcome to the program. A

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<v Speaker 2>two part story here, one part the statement, the second

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<v Speaker 2>part the news conference. The statement push stocks down and

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<v Speaker 2>bonyards a little bit higher. In the news conference, equities

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<v Speaker 2>came off the lows and bonyards came off the highs.

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<v Speaker 2>In the statement, the Federal Reserve repeated that inflation remained

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<v Speaker 2>somewhat elevated, but removed this reference to this line of

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<v Speaker 2>it having made any progress towards their two percent goals.

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<v Speaker 3>So that sounded somewhat hawkish, didn't it.

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<v Speaker 2>So ultimately, inevitably the Federal Reserve chair was asked about this,

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<v Speaker 2>and this is what he had to say in Oppressor

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<v Speaker 2>just moments ago.

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<v Speaker 4>If you just look at the first paragraph, we did

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<v Speaker 4>a little bit of language clean up there. We took

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<v Speaker 4>out a reference to since earlier in the year is

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<v Speaker 4>related to the labor market, and we just chose to

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<v Speaker 4>shorten that sentence.

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<v Speaker 3>Again.

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<v Speaker 4>I mean, if you look at the sort of intermeding

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<v Speaker 4>data was good, and there was another inflation reading I

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<v Speaker 4>guess just before the December meeting. So we've got two

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<v Speaker 4>good readings in a row that are consistent with two

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<v Speaker 4>percent inflation. Again, we're not going to over interpret two

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<v Speaker 4>good or too bad readings. But this was not meant

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<v Speaker 4>to send a signal other than this.

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<v Speaker 2>Sole So we talked about it for the best part

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<v Speaker 2>of thirty minutes. We thought it was a hawkish till

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<v Speaker 2>and the statement. The chairman came out and said that

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<v Speaker 2>line was not meant to send any signal.

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<v Speaker 5>It was just language cleanup.

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<v Speaker 1>If you look at the first sentence, when you take

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<v Speaker 1>your sharpie, you go like this, and then you go

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<v Speaker 1>like this. I mean, look, this was someone who talked

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<v Speaker 1>in circles quite a bit. It was sort of saying something,

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<v Speaker 1>but what are these? These are words, We don't know anything.

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<v Speaker 1>I don't want to start speculating because he really to

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<v Speaker 1>that and we can't really have any model. So he

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<v Speaker 1>basically came out and did exactly what he wanted to do,

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<v Speaker 1>which was.

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<v Speaker 3>Say nothing on the labor market. Downside.

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<v Speaker 2>Risk of the labor market appeared to have abates it.

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<v Speaker 2>This is a cha from where they were maybe back

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<v Speaker 2>in September. There was this labor market scare tek in

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<v Speaker 2>the summer, which this fed responded to with one hundred

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<v Speaker 2>basis points of carts to insulate the economy from seeing

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<v Speaker 2>getting further weakness, something that the chairman said at Jackson Hole

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<v Speaker 2>he didn't want to see t Ken. It feels like

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<v Speaker 2>they're a lot more comfortable with the situation.

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<v Speaker 6>I totally agree when you heard that from our guests

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<v Speaker 6>in the previous pre press conference. Prestatement as well. And

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<v Speaker 6>it does get to John wnder Claim's breakout the basic

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<v Speaker 6>you know stuff we cover each and every day, and

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<v Speaker 6>it goes to get the march the idea of how

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<v Speaker 6>many meetings do we have, how many inflation reports do

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<v Speaker 6>we have? How many jobs reports? I think the most

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<v Speaker 6>amazing thing about this is you and I could focus here.

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<v Speaker 6>I mean, we're twenty minutes in with Man City, twenty

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<v Speaker 6>three minutes in with Man City, and they haven't got

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<v Speaker 6>it done versus Club Brush.

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<v Speaker 3>I mean, no, no, this is just no, just I

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<v Speaker 3>was joking about it. You're actually watching it. No, it's important,

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<v Speaker 3>you know.

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<v Speaker 6>I mean, there's what eighteen nineteen champions games going on

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<v Speaker 6>that's more exciting than the press conferences.

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<v Speaker 2>Definitely, Roth of woll Th Research is not watching the

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<v Speaker 2>European football right now. Is excite hit on that nearest

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<v Speaker 2>conference we all just had in the last sixty minutes.

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<v Speaker 3>Stephanie's going to see you.

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<v Speaker 7>Good to see you.

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<v Speaker 3>What did you make of that?

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<v Speaker 8>He didn't say all that much, and he then he

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<v Speaker 8>did a little bit of reversal from the hawkish part

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<v Speaker 8>of the statement. It was January clean up, like you

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<v Speaker 8>just mentioned, and then some of the key things was

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<v Speaker 8>meaningfully above long term neutral, and then he made some

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<v Speaker 8>conflicting statements about yes, rates are above neutral, but then

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<v Speaker 8>financial conditions are a little bit easy. So he kind

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<v Speaker 8>of settle a little bit of a lot.

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<v Speaker 1>That's exactly what I've been trying to wrap my head around.

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<v Speaker 1>Meaningfully above neutral, but we can move slowly and we

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<v Speaker 1>don't have to move at all.

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<v Speaker 5>We could just observe we are looking.

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<v Speaker 1>At restrictive rates but also accommodative conditions.

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<v Speaker 5>Was this successful? Yeah?

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<v Speaker 8>I think he wanted to get in and out without

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<v Speaker 8>moving markets all that much, and yeah it was a

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<v Speaker 8>bit of a ride, but that's kind of what he accomplished.

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<v Speaker 6>I want to note Meta and Microsoft leg up here

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<v Speaker 6>as we get to those earnings as well. Somewhere in

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<v Speaker 6>there was some stuff in yourro Off language where he

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<v Speaker 6>talked about a central a limit, you know, a Gaussian curve,

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<v Speaker 6>a bell curve in that My basic is, this is

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<v Speaker 6>not a bell curve society. There's a log normal risk here.

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<v Speaker 6>What's the risk for you, Stephanie Roth In terms of

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<v Speaker 6>the Fed parlor game forward? What's the thing they really

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<v Speaker 6>need to focus on to stagger to march?

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<v Speaker 8>The most important thing that we're going to be watching

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<v Speaker 8>for is what happens from labor supply perspective, because there's

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<v Speaker 8>going to be three and a half million people potentially

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<v Speaker 8>losing their visa status over the next two years, and

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<v Speaker 8>that could tighten the labor market, and it could happen

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<v Speaker 8>kind of slowly and gradually, and maybe we won't really

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<v Speaker 8>realize it until the second half of this year, and

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<v Speaker 8>then you realize, wow.

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<v Speaker 7>The uneployed.

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<v Speaker 6>Right, will the president focus on the labor mandate or

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<v Speaker 6>will the president focus on inflation? Or is he just

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<v Speaker 6>going to focus on I'm a real estate transactional guy

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<v Speaker 6>and I need low rates.

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<v Speaker 8>Probably the latter, but the other things are going to

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<v Speaker 8>be important too, Right, So if we have the immigration

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<v Speaker 8>thing slowly happening in the background, and we don't really

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<v Speaker 8>notice it until the labor market's kind of quite a

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<v Speaker 8>bit tight.

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<v Speaker 7>So we just we just changed our FED call.

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<v Speaker 8>We were calling for previously for two cuts, now we're

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<v Speaker 8>calling for one in May, and then I think after

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<v Speaker 8>that they're going to be done for a while. They're

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<v Speaker 8>gonna have to wait and see how things play out.

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<v Speaker 2>Just out of interest, why mightna We're gonna probably have

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<v Speaker 2>some bad data for the next couple of months from

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<v Speaker 2>an inflation perspective.

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<v Speaker 8>We still have the Q one seasonal problems from inflation,

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<v Speaker 8>so we're gonna have to get through that, and then

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<v Speaker 8>in May you can have some better data because you'll

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<v Speaker 8>start to see a little bit of that inflation coming out.

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<v Speaker 1>Do you feel like there's clarity and meaningfully restrictive. I

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<v Speaker 1>want to go back to that for one second. I'm

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<v Speaker 1>still trying to wrap my head around.

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<v Speaker 3>Well, I'm with you.

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<v Speaker 1>I kind of feel like it's important here because that

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<v Speaker 1>was one of the key questions. That was what Bob

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<v Speaker 1>Michael was talking about, and that is the question how

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<v Speaker 1>much do you.

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<v Speaker 5>Have to reduce it? And then you kind of was like,

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<v Speaker 5>we're above it.

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<v Speaker 1>And maybe we'll reduce it. Is it a problem, just

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<v Speaker 1>going back to this Mohammedalarian point, Is it a problem

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<v Speaker 1>that this is a FED that doesn't seem to have

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<v Speaker 1>a clear message or a clear direction at a time

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<v Speaker 1>when people view this as one of the biggest potential

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<v Speaker 1>upsets to the market and to some of the stability

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<v Speaker 1>that we're seeing in terms of the self landing.

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<v Speaker 8>I mean, so the channel, they don't they don't have

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<v Speaker 8>a firm view on policy, and they don't even seem

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<v Speaker 8>to agree to some extent, nor do they want to

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<v Speaker 8>come out and say it from a policy in terms

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<v Speaker 8>of how they're assessing fiscal right. So it's going to

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<v Speaker 8>very much depend on inflation expectations.

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<v Speaker 7>Are they anchored?

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<v Speaker 8>And Powell mentioned the Teal book from September twenty eighteen,

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<v Speaker 8>and I think that's exactly how they're going to look

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<v Speaker 8>at it. If we see inflation expectations remain anchored, the

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<v Speaker 8>Fed could wait for a while and then next year

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<v Speaker 8>we're probably going to see slower growth as a result,

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<v Speaker 8>and that's when they might have an opportunity to cut again.

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<v Speaker 1>When you talk about inflation expectations in near term and

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<v Speaker 1>long term, what are we talking about Are we talking

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<v Speaker 1>about the University of Michigan sentiment survey that is hugely

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<v Speaker 1>politically affected. Are we talking about the consumer Conference board?

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<v Speaker 1>Are we talking about five year five year forward break events?

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<v Speaker 7>Right?

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<v Speaker 5>What is the gauge that is important to this federal Reserve?

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<v Speaker 8>I would say probably you missed and probably inflation break evens.

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<v Speaker 8>The combination, even though we all know you miss isn't

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<v Speaker 8>that grade of a measure.

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<v Speaker 7>But we all seem to watch it anyway. I don't

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<v Speaker 7>know why, but.

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<v Speaker 3>We watch it because they do. That's fair and pound

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<v Speaker 3>on this Federal Reserve. Respect on the two edge.

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<v Speaker 2>You remember that jump by right hind back in the day,

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<v Speaker 2>you Mitch apparently, Yeah, and.

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<v Speaker 8>It notoriously comes out with the reading and then the

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<v Speaker 8>final reading ends up getting revised back down from an

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<v Speaker 8>inflation perspective.

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<v Speaker 7>Where are we in June?

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<v Speaker 6>I mean you mentioned March and May and the meetings,

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<v Speaker 6>But within the conversation we have with four or five

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<v Speaker 6>worthies today, the question is what real GDP does out

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<v Speaker 6>to June? I mean, you know, the facts change, Are

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<v Speaker 6>the facts going to change? Or are we going to

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<v Speaker 6>continue with this growth economy helping part of America not

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<v Speaker 6>all of America.

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<v Speaker 7>We're probably going to be in this growth economy.

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<v Speaker 8>The one thing from from a sort of lower income

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<v Speaker 8>perspective is animal spirits may support the broad based the

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<v Speaker 8>broad based consumer. We might actually start to see good

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<v Speaker 8>spending pick up, which could help kind of the bulk

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<v Speaker 8>of the economy because they're getting ahead of tariffs.

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<v Speaker 6>Yeah, and John, I mean I got Microsoft legging up

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<v Speaker 6>here now or it was before the meeting. I mean,

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<v Speaker 6>we're going into earnings in one part of America.

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<v Speaker 2>John.

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<v Speaker 6>They don't give a damn what Jerome poll says. They're

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<v Speaker 6>just looking at free cash flow. Microsoft.

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<v Speaker 2>On the rest, I'm miss working with you on a

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<v Speaker 2>daily basis for a whole host of reasons. But just

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<v Speaker 2>then I had no idea if you're coming to me

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<v Speaker 2>because Man City had scored.

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<v Speaker 3>If they'd scored, I.

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<v Speaker 6>Wasn't sure what to brak is in my ear saying,

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<v Speaker 6>don't you dare? I don't even know how to pronounce it.

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<v Speaker 6>Zagreb one ac milan zero.

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<v Speaker 3>Is that that's true? Is that just happened? You're okay? Okay,

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<v Speaker 3>Well I'm not okay.

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<v Speaker 2>Now's continue by talking about financial market and central bank decisions.

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<v Speaker 2>Lisa mentioned the Bank of Canada a little bit earlier,

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<v Speaker 2>Luke Howard writes and and said thank you, by the way.

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<v Speaker 5>Yeah, well it's important, Luke, I got you back.

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<v Speaker 2>Tiff Maclin and a Bank of Canada. They did decide

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<v Speaker 2>to reduce interest rates. They did decide to say, you

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<v Speaker 2>know what, we can't offer guidance because of Tariff's Why

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<v Speaker 2>is it any different for Chairman Powell and this feeder reserve.

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<v Speaker 8>We have an economy that's running well above trend. We

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<v Speaker 8>were going to see a GDP print that's close to

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<v Speaker 8>three percent this week.

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<v Speaker 6>Right.

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<v Speaker 8>The ecomomy's fine, there's no rush, and that's what he said.

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<v Speaker 8>There's no They're not in a hurry.

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<v Speaker 6>This is the single most important observation fed the sides today.

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<v Speaker 6>America is totally different than when I witnessed in Toronto

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<v Speaker 6>a number of months ago. We are separate in our

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<v Speaker 6>exceptionalism and it was in spades when I.

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<v Speaker 2>Was up in case just because of the strength of

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<v Speaker 2>the economy. Somo, do you think it's it's a tech overlay.

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<v Speaker 2>This is about the President of the United States and

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<v Speaker 2>that worried about what it's.

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<v Speaker 6>A little bit. I'll go with that overlay, but it's

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<v Speaker 6>most about Clarita's colleague Ned Phelps, and our dynamism is

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<v Speaker 6>tangible again with Microsoft kicking it off here with Meta

0:09:26.240 --> 0:09:28.560
<v Speaker 6>in a bit, Lisa, you feel the same way.

0:09:30.200 --> 0:09:33.880
<v Speaker 1>I guess the US has a much more robust economy.

0:09:34.000 --> 0:09:36.600
<v Speaker 1>It also is essential bank to the world in many

0:09:36.600 --> 0:09:37.280
<v Speaker 1>different ways.

0:09:37.480 --> 0:09:41.520
<v Speaker 5>It also is not being subject to a president.

0:09:41.679 --> 0:09:44.079
<v Speaker 1>It is part of a country with a president. It's

0:09:44.200 --> 0:09:47.800
<v Speaker 1>very different for say Canada that is facing off with that.

0:09:48.559 --> 0:09:50.640
<v Speaker 1>I was a little lost in thought there, and the

0:09:50.720 --> 0:09:52.440
<v Speaker 1>reason why is because.

0:09:52.240 --> 0:09:53.440
<v Speaker 3>You're watching a football take and.

0:09:56.920 --> 0:09:59.960
<v Speaker 1>I'm trying to wrap my head around whether it's appropriate

0:10:00.320 --> 0:10:03.400
<v Speaker 1>for this fed to be sort of directionless right now,

0:10:03.559 --> 0:10:06.080
<v Speaker 1>or whether it's inappropriate. You know, I don't know whether

0:10:06.160 --> 0:10:08.640
<v Speaker 1>it is appropriate because it is an uncertain time, and

0:10:08.679 --> 0:10:11.960
<v Speaker 1>I don't know if it's inappropriate because they have to

0:10:12.000 --> 0:10:14.280
<v Speaker 1>give some sort of sense of what the reaction function

0:10:14.480 --> 0:10:17.320
<v Speaker 1>is and the scenario analysis and they.

0:10:17.200 --> 0:10:19.240
<v Speaker 5>Could have a more clear view. I don't have an

0:10:19.280 --> 0:10:19.960
<v Speaker 5>answer on that.

0:10:20.080 --> 0:10:22.480
<v Speaker 6>Seventy year off how x post are they? That's all

0:10:22.480 --> 0:10:25.560
<v Speaker 6>there is to it to me. They're massively exposed waiting

0:10:25.640 --> 0:10:26.200
<v Speaker 6>for data.

0:10:26.320 --> 0:10:28.440
<v Speaker 8>Yeah, I think that's been the case over the past

0:10:28.520 --> 0:10:31.600
<v Speaker 8>couple of years. Is they've been very much data point dependent,

0:10:31.600 --> 0:10:32.240
<v Speaker 8>which they say.

0:10:32.080 --> 0:10:33.480
<v Speaker 7>They don't want to be, but they have been.

0:10:33.520 --> 0:10:34.040
<v Speaker 3>But they are.

0:10:34.320 --> 0:10:35.920
<v Speaker 8>They are, and they have been, and that's going to

0:10:35.960 --> 0:10:37.640
<v Speaker 8>be the case for much of this year. They're going

0:10:37.679 --> 0:10:40.600
<v Speaker 8>to react to see how fiscal policy ends up playing out,

0:10:41.400 --> 0:10:44.200
<v Speaker 8>and they're in a weight and see mode, which is

0:10:44.360 --> 0:10:46.880
<v Speaker 8>confusing for investors. But at least at this point, the

0:10:46.920 --> 0:10:49.200
<v Speaker 8>E commy's doing just fine. Inflation has settled down, so

0:10:49.240 --> 0:10:50.640
<v Speaker 8>it's not really that big of a problem.

0:10:50.720 --> 0:10:53.120
<v Speaker 2>This found like a clean up for December. That's what

0:10:53.160 --> 0:10:55.520
<v Speaker 2>it found like to me, a cleanup for December. This

0:10:55.600 --> 0:10:59.439
<v Speaker 2>isn't about policy changes, This isn't about expected policy changes.

0:10:59.480 --> 0:11:01.840
<v Speaker 2>This is about you on the labor market and inflation,

0:11:02.000 --> 0:11:04.600
<v Speaker 2>and that's why we've not got interest rates today. Back

0:11:04.640 --> 0:11:07.000
<v Speaker 2>in December, chem and Powell made a hash of that,

0:11:07.280 --> 0:11:08.319
<v Speaker 2>and I think he made a hash of it, and

0:11:08.520 --> 0:11:10.160
<v Speaker 2>I do have some sympathy that it was because of

0:11:10.160 --> 0:11:13.640
<v Speaker 2>what happened with the forecasts and how some officials incorporated

0:11:13.679 --> 0:11:16.800
<v Speaker 2>some policy uncertainty TK and ultimately they changed.

0:11:16.559 --> 0:11:21.640
<v Speaker 6>The better because I don't Lisa reads the minutes, but

0:11:22.080 --> 0:11:24.200
<v Speaker 6>when Colby, I think it was her follow on question,

0:11:24.280 --> 0:11:26.000
<v Speaker 6>and you played it there when Colby Smith at the

0:11:26.040 --> 0:11:29.160
<v Speaker 6>Times he's hit some mumbo jump about we cleaned up

0:11:29.160 --> 0:11:30.040
<v Speaker 6>the language.

0:11:30.679 --> 0:11:35.360
<v Speaker 3>What God's does read that, it's hard not to read that.

0:11:35.440 --> 0:11:37.120
<v Speaker 2>It's hard to read that, and just walk away with

0:11:37.160 --> 0:11:39.480
<v Speaker 2>this idea that, yeah, that doesn't mean anything. I mean,

0:11:39.520 --> 0:11:41.520
<v Speaker 2>I take signal from that, whether he says there's no

0:11:41.600 --> 0:11:44.120
<v Speaker 2>signal in it or not, I take signal from that.

0:11:44.160 --> 0:11:46.240
<v Speaker 1>Change, which is the reason why the market hasn't given

0:11:46.320 --> 0:11:49.520
<v Speaker 1>back the entirety of the move. You're right, though, again,

0:11:49.840 --> 0:11:52.480
<v Speaker 1>how do we interpret the fact that don't see what

0:11:52.559 --> 0:11:54.680
<v Speaker 1>your eyes see, don't read what your eyes read.

0:11:54.960 --> 0:11:56.800
<v Speaker 5>There is no meaning in words.

0:11:56.480 --> 0:11:59.880
<v Speaker 1>That are very deliberately crafted to give meaning and to

0:12:00.160 --> 0:12:02.240
<v Speaker 1>really gives some indication to the markets. Which is the

0:12:02.280 --> 0:12:05.720
<v Speaker 1>reason why I'm grappling with the idea of a rudderless market,

0:12:05.880 --> 0:12:08.559
<v Speaker 1>a rudderless fed, I should say, and whether that is

0:12:08.960 --> 0:12:12.920
<v Speaker 1>okay inappropriate or whether it is potentially inappropriate at a

0:12:13.000 --> 0:12:15.320
<v Speaker 1>time when a lot of people are worried about a

0:12:15.320 --> 0:12:17.000
<v Speaker 1>potential FED policy.

0:12:17.120 --> 0:12:19.680
<v Speaker 2>Er, Stephanie, it's going to see you as always, thanks

0:12:19.679 --> 0:12:22.280
<v Speaker 2>for dropping by Stephanie Rothmare of Wolf Research. Then that's

0:12:22.320 --> 0:12:24.959
<v Speaker 2>like just moments ago turning positive slightly negative now in

0:12:25.000 --> 0:12:27.480
<v Speaker 2>the s and P. Five hundred, erasing the losses of

0:12:27.559 --> 0:12:30.040
<v Speaker 2>this afternoon. Mike McKee was in the news conference. He's

0:12:30.080 --> 0:12:31.680
<v Speaker 2>back out now he can share some of his thoughts

0:12:31.720 --> 0:12:33.760
<v Speaker 2>with us. Mike, share with us how that went from

0:12:33.800 --> 0:12:36.199
<v Speaker 2>your side, from your perspective in the room.

0:12:37.320 --> 0:12:39.840
<v Speaker 9>Well, I would disagree with you a little bit, John,

0:12:39.880 --> 0:12:42.520
<v Speaker 9>and say that this wasn't probably an effort to send

0:12:42.559 --> 0:12:46.120
<v Speaker 9>some sort of signal or even necessarily a cleanup as such.

0:12:46.440 --> 0:12:49.760
<v Speaker 9>I think the FED is sort of at sea. They

0:12:49.800 --> 0:12:52.160
<v Speaker 9>don't know what is going to happen, and since the

0:12:52.200 --> 0:12:56.960
<v Speaker 9>economy is performing well, unemployment is low, inflation is not

0:12:57.200 --> 0:12:59.679
<v Speaker 9>going back up, it has stalled out a little bit,

0:13:00.080 --> 0:13:02.920
<v Speaker 9>they feel they can wait. They don't need to do

0:13:03.160 --> 0:13:07.079
<v Speaker 9>anything else at this point. I asked him specifically whether

0:13:07.120 --> 0:13:09.920
<v Speaker 9>they had a forecast they could rely on, and he

0:13:10.000 --> 0:13:13.080
<v Speaker 9>said no. He was also asked is March a live meeting,

0:13:13.120 --> 0:13:15.000
<v Speaker 9>and he said, it's a live meeting.

0:13:14.720 --> 0:13:15.880
<v Speaker 3>But we don't have any idea.

0:13:15.880 --> 0:13:18.360
<v Speaker 9>We're going to look to the data, et cetera. So

0:13:18.400 --> 0:13:20.960
<v Speaker 9>I think right now what you've got is FED that's

0:13:21.080 --> 0:13:23.560
<v Speaker 9>just trying to stay out of the way as long

0:13:23.600 --> 0:13:26.480
<v Speaker 9>as they can and they can as long as the

0:13:26.559 --> 0:13:29.520
<v Speaker 9>data continue to show the economy's doing okay.

0:13:29.600 --> 0:13:31.680
<v Speaker 1>Mike, do you expect that in March it's going to

0:13:31.679 --> 0:13:33.640
<v Speaker 1>be a more complicated staying out of the way at

0:13:33.640 --> 0:13:35.840
<v Speaker 1>a time where you have to reflect a number of

0:13:35.920 --> 0:13:39.719
<v Speaker 1>views that might not be in the same vein as J.

0:13:39.920 --> 0:13:40.280
<v Speaker 5>Powell.

0:13:40.320 --> 0:13:42.400
<v Speaker 1>That seemed to be what the problem was in December,

0:13:42.400 --> 0:13:46.120
<v Speaker 1>reflecting that some members did think about what policies could

0:13:46.160 --> 0:13:46.920
<v Speaker 1>be going forward.

0:13:48.320 --> 0:13:51.200
<v Speaker 9>Well, I think it'll probably be more confusing, But how

0:13:51.240 --> 0:13:54.680
<v Speaker 9>confusing will depend on the president and what is happening.

0:13:54.720 --> 0:13:59.319
<v Speaker 9>If he has imposed tariffs, if those tariffs invite retaliation,

0:13:59.800 --> 0:14:02.720
<v Speaker 9>how long the tariffs will last, how high the tariffs

0:14:02.720 --> 0:14:06.080
<v Speaker 9>will be, will probably present different economic models to the

0:14:06.160 --> 0:14:09.439
<v Speaker 9>various voters on the Open Market Committee, and there may

0:14:09.480 --> 0:14:13.000
<v Speaker 9>be some disagreement. I suppose they'll come together on whether

0:14:13.040 --> 0:14:16.440
<v Speaker 9>they need to cut rates or not to overcome some

0:14:16.600 --> 0:14:20.800
<v Speaker 9>of the issues that that would raise. But they're going

0:14:20.880 --> 0:14:23.280
<v Speaker 9>to have to wait and see exactly.

0:14:22.840 --> 0:14:23.480
<v Speaker 3>What this does.

0:14:23.520 --> 0:14:26.160
<v Speaker 9>Now by March, you probably won't have much of an

0:14:26.200 --> 0:14:28.920
<v Speaker 9>economic effect, so they will have to game out what

0:14:29.000 --> 0:14:33.120
<v Speaker 9>they think will happen from whatever tariff announcements come out.

0:14:33.320 --> 0:14:36.720
<v Speaker 2>As the defender of chief of that great institution behind you, Mike,

0:14:36.720 --> 0:14:39.000
<v Speaker 2>I had no doubt you disagree with me, Michael mckaytha.

0:14:39.360 --> 0:14:41.840
<v Speaker 2>Everybody on the Federals might thank you. If they're trying

0:14:41.880 --> 0:14:43.680
<v Speaker 2>to stay out the way this time, it's because they

0:14:43.760 --> 0:14:46.120
<v Speaker 2>got in the way back in December. And I think

0:14:46.120 --> 0:14:48.040
<v Speaker 2>a lot of paper would take that perspective as well.

0:14:48.280 --> 0:14:51.520
<v Speaker 1>This was I trying to walk back the idea of

0:14:52.200 --> 0:14:56.400
<v Speaker 1>talking about speculation around policies. It seems as there is

0:14:56.440 --> 0:14:59.840
<v Speaker 1>a divide and there is a curious question around whether

0:14:59.840 --> 0:15:01.960
<v Speaker 1>it this is something built ugly raised. They're going to

0:15:02.000 --> 0:15:05.080
<v Speaker 1>start to go towards the staff assumption and really reflect

0:15:05.080 --> 0:15:09.080
<v Speaker 1>the staff economic forecasts and not necessarily desparate fed members.

0:15:09.120 --> 0:15:11.680
<v Speaker 1>It might clear the air a little bit in terms

0:15:11.720 --> 0:15:13.560
<v Speaker 1>of having some of these awkward moments.

0:15:13.600 --> 0:15:16.240
<v Speaker 6>I go back to just Stephanie Roth. I think nailed

0:15:16.240 --> 0:15:18.120
<v Speaker 6>it on the mandate. It's a job market.

0:15:18.240 --> 0:15:18.400
<v Speaker 7>You know.

0:15:18.520 --> 0:15:21.760
<v Speaker 6>Guess what Thursday claims matter. You can need afford having average.

0:15:22.040 --> 0:15:25.440
<v Speaker 6>Thursday claims it hasn't broken yet, and when until the

0:15:25.560 --> 0:15:27.840
<v Speaker 6>job market breaks? And I feel bad about this because

0:15:28.320 --> 0:15:31.120
<v Speaker 6>again off Craig tour is reporting a good portion of

0:15:31.160 --> 0:15:33.520
<v Speaker 6>America the job market's already broken.

0:15:34.320 --> 0:15:34.840
<v Speaker 3>It's tough.

0:15:35.040 --> 0:15:37.040
<v Speaker 2>I can't believe it's actually one nail. And I've got

0:15:37.200 --> 0:15:39.800
<v Speaker 2>mail wound up about the football. Jeff Rosenberg and black

0:15:39.880 --> 0:15:41.640
<v Speaker 2>Rocks joins us now to talk about the markets and

0:15:41.640 --> 0:15:44.280
<v Speaker 2>not the European football. Jeff, Welcome to the program sir.

0:15:44.400 --> 0:15:46.800
<v Speaker 2>Lots of debate about what was intended and what wasn't

0:15:46.840 --> 0:15:49.600
<v Speaker 2>intended in that statement throughout that news conference. What was

0:15:49.600 --> 0:15:51.400
<v Speaker 2>your big takeaway this afternoon?

0:15:52.280 --> 0:15:54.080
<v Speaker 10>So a couple of takeaways, but I think the big

0:15:54.120 --> 0:15:58.600
<v Speaker 10>takeaway is clearly a reiteration of the end of the

0:15:58.680 --> 0:16:03.680
<v Speaker 10>December FMC signaling that this is a FED that's not

0:16:03.920 --> 0:16:06.680
<v Speaker 10>in a hurry to take any further actions. And and

0:16:06.720 --> 0:16:09.040
<v Speaker 10>so you kind of bookmark where we are. This is

0:16:09.080 --> 0:16:11.440
<v Speaker 10>the pause, this is the articulation of the pause.

0:16:11.960 --> 0:16:12.040
<v Speaker 8>Uh.

0:16:12.120 --> 0:16:14.440
<v Speaker 10>And he outlined those those reasons, and I think that's

0:16:14.680 --> 0:16:17.720
<v Speaker 10>kind of overriding the main story. It's not a huge

0:16:17.760 --> 0:16:20.360
<v Speaker 10>story because that was pretty much well.

0:16:20.720 --> 0:16:21.280
<v Speaker 3>In the market.

0:16:21.360 --> 0:16:23.760
<v Speaker 10>You're not seeing a big market reaction. Second thing I

0:16:23.800 --> 0:16:26.360
<v Speaker 10>would take away, Lisa, you highlighted it. You know, there's

0:16:26.400 --> 0:16:29.640
<v Speaker 10>some contradictions here, uh, and they were kind of highlighted

0:16:29.640 --> 0:16:31.920
<v Speaker 10>in the press conference and we've had those contradictions for

0:16:31.960 --> 0:16:35.840
<v Speaker 10>a while. You know, meaningfully restrictive yet financial conditions are easy,

0:16:36.440 --> 0:16:39.520
<v Speaker 10>meaningfully restrictive, yet we're not in a hurry. And I

0:16:39.560 --> 0:16:42.800
<v Speaker 10>agree with you, Lisa, and have said for for a while, this,

0:16:42.800 --> 0:16:46.000
<v Speaker 10>this failure to kind of take into account the role

0:16:46.040 --> 0:16:49.640
<v Speaker 10>of financial conditions in the setting of policy, kind of

0:16:49.680 --> 0:16:53.240
<v Speaker 10>like moving that more to the background, is a real

0:16:53.840 --> 0:16:56.800
<v Speaker 10>issue here for the conduct of monetary policy, and it

0:16:57.040 --> 0:16:58.720
<v Speaker 10>and it remains in that and that kind of that

0:16:58.840 --> 0:17:00.960
<v Speaker 10>kind of came up. And then the third point I'd

0:17:01.160 --> 0:17:03.840
<v Speaker 10>kind of highlighted, Jhonath, this is where you just left off,

0:17:04.080 --> 0:17:06.760
<v Speaker 10>is you know, just how is the FED going to

0:17:06.880 --> 0:17:12.800
<v Speaker 10>manage through this environment of heightened policy uncertainty? And he

0:17:12.960 --> 0:17:15.760
<v Speaker 10>kind of addressed it and then didn't want to address

0:17:15.800 --> 0:17:19.280
<v Speaker 10>it because there's no real good answers for that because

0:17:19.600 --> 0:17:24.359
<v Speaker 10>the policy is being made and the outcomes are not known,

0:17:24.440 --> 0:17:27.720
<v Speaker 10>so they're gonna have to be reactive to that. There's

0:17:27.720 --> 0:17:32.440
<v Speaker 10>no forecast ability. There's a range of outcomes that he

0:17:32.560 --> 0:17:37.720
<v Speaker 10>talked about, it's not elevated relative to COVID or GFC.

0:17:37.840 --> 0:17:40.320
<v Speaker 10>So he got that question to kind of, you know,

0:17:40.480 --> 0:17:44.600
<v Speaker 10>tamp down some of the concerns around it being elevated,

0:17:44.640 --> 0:17:48.960
<v Speaker 10>but it's an elevated degree of uncertainty centered around policy uncertainty.

0:17:49.160 --> 0:17:52.199
<v Speaker 1>Jeff I was musing over whether it was appropriate for

0:17:52.240 --> 0:17:55.199
<v Speaker 1>a federal reserve to basically not have a clear message

0:17:55.200 --> 0:17:59.359
<v Speaker 1>at a time where there are very clear economic conditions

0:17:59.359 --> 0:18:00.440
<v Speaker 1>and potential.

0:18:00.000 --> 0:18:01.040
<v Speaker 5>Policies down the pike.

0:18:01.640 --> 0:18:03.920
<v Speaker 1>I'm going to ask you this in a slightly different

0:18:03.960 --> 0:18:05.720
<v Speaker 1>way as a market participant.

0:18:05.880 --> 0:18:06.880
<v Speaker 5>Does it introduce a.

0:18:06.840 --> 0:18:11.000
<v Speaker 1>Greater degree of liability tied to FED decisions not having

0:18:11.000 --> 0:18:15.080
<v Speaker 1>a good understanding understanding of exactly how they are going

0:18:15.119 --> 0:18:18.359
<v Speaker 1>to proceed given certain potential developments.

0:18:19.640 --> 0:18:23.399
<v Speaker 10>Yeah, it's what we call the reaction function, and we're

0:18:23.520 --> 0:18:27.680
<v Speaker 10>very much focused on thinking a couple of steps ahead

0:18:27.840 --> 0:18:30.600
<v Speaker 10>of how is the FED going to react to data?

0:18:30.600 --> 0:18:32.480
<v Speaker 10>How is the FED going to react to uncertainty, because

0:18:32.480 --> 0:18:34.840
<v Speaker 10>that's how we're going to price in the bond markets.

0:18:34.880 --> 0:18:37.840
<v Speaker 10>You know, we moved a long way away from forecast

0:18:37.960 --> 0:18:41.840
<v Speaker 10>dependency and a forecast dependent FED towards a data dependent

0:18:41.920 --> 0:18:45.919
<v Speaker 10>FED and now a policy dependent FED, and so that

0:18:46.000 --> 0:18:49.560
<v Speaker 10>makes it a bit challenging, but again kind of in

0:18:49.600 --> 0:18:52.600
<v Speaker 10>the context of putting it into a historical context, not

0:18:52.800 --> 0:18:57.840
<v Speaker 10>more challenging than it has been in the past. The FED,

0:18:58.240 --> 0:19:01.120
<v Speaker 10>you know, gives us some guidance. I think he reiterated

0:19:01.119 --> 0:19:04.199
<v Speaker 10>that guidance here. You see it in the pricing. The

0:19:04.359 --> 0:19:08.480
<v Speaker 10>disconnect between market expectations and the FED rhetoric is actually

0:19:08.720 --> 0:19:12.600
<v Speaker 10>the lowest it's been and that kind of narrows the

0:19:12.720 --> 0:19:15.199
<v Speaker 10>range of outcomes here. So it's a little bit in

0:19:15.200 --> 0:19:18.800
<v Speaker 10>some sense less uncertainty around the disconnect between bond market

0:19:18.840 --> 0:19:20.160
<v Speaker 10>pricing and what the FED is signaling.

0:19:20.240 --> 0:19:23.320
<v Speaker 6>And Jeff the technology of America, you're hardwired with it

0:19:23.320 --> 0:19:26.680
<v Speaker 6>with your heritage to Carnegie Mellon. We saw the technology

0:19:26.720 --> 0:19:30.679
<v Speaker 6>bro line up at the inauguration front and center as well.

0:19:31.000 --> 0:19:35.399
<v Speaker 6>How do you overlay this technology boom that we're in

0:19:35.480 --> 0:19:37.880
<v Speaker 6>right now? I'm looking at the Nasdaq back thirty years

0:19:37.880 --> 0:19:42.080
<v Speaker 6>It's unreal, And he answered, Jeffers, how do you overlay

0:19:42.119 --> 0:19:46.640
<v Speaker 6>this technology boom into your rate space and into what

0:19:46.680 --> 0:19:49.000
<v Speaker 6>the FED will do? It's a bolt on which I

0:19:49.320 --> 0:19:51.000
<v Speaker 6>just can't get a handle on.

0:19:52.080 --> 0:19:54.160
<v Speaker 10>Yeah, it's a great question. It came up a little

0:19:54.200 --> 0:19:57.560
<v Speaker 10>bit in the press conference today as well, and so

0:19:57.880 --> 0:19:59.880
<v Speaker 10>you know, one way and it's not the only way,

0:20:00.000 --> 0:20:01.719
<v Speaker 10>because what we're talking about here and when we talk

0:20:01.760 --> 0:20:05.320
<v Speaker 10>about the megaforces of AI, you know are so profound

0:20:05.359 --> 0:20:08.000
<v Speaker 10>through so many parts of our economy, But a very

0:20:08.040 --> 0:20:10.639
<v Speaker 10>simple way of thinking about it in the macro lens

0:20:11.280 --> 0:20:14.560
<v Speaker 10>is the wealth creation that we've seen in terms of

0:20:14.600 --> 0:20:18.879
<v Speaker 10>the equity market, equity market performance, the way in which

0:20:18.920 --> 0:20:25.160
<v Speaker 10>that translates into financial conditions, into wealth effects, into confidence effects,

0:20:25.280 --> 0:20:26.879
<v Speaker 10>and ultimately into consumption.

0:20:27.040 --> 0:20:27.600
<v Speaker 3>I think it's a.

0:20:27.560 --> 0:20:32.040
<v Speaker 10>Big reason for why the disconnect between looking at the

0:20:32.080 --> 0:20:37.480
<v Speaker 10>degree of policy restrictiveness, meaningfully restrictive takes the lens of

0:20:37.880 --> 0:20:41.440
<v Speaker 10>what is the interest rate relative to inflation? How does

0:20:41.480 --> 0:20:45.960
<v Speaker 10>that look historically, But it ignores the impact of the

0:20:46.000 --> 0:20:49.239
<v Speaker 10>wealth effect that we're seeing in consumer confidence effects from that,

0:20:49.440 --> 0:20:53.240
<v Speaker 10>which have a large element of the AI mega trends,

0:20:53.280 --> 0:20:56.920
<v Speaker 10>the AI boom, the incredible experiment in profits and revenues

0:20:56.960 --> 0:21:01.520
<v Speaker 10>that we're seeing flow through into people's feelings of wealth,

0:21:01.560 --> 0:21:05.400
<v Speaker 10>and we know that consumers and consumption is very much

0:21:05.520 --> 0:21:07.880
<v Speaker 10>driven by that aspect. And so I think that's been

0:21:08.160 --> 0:21:14.120
<v Speaker 10>kind of an underappreciated element to why despite meaningfully restrictive policy,

0:21:14.119 --> 0:21:17.560
<v Speaker 10>we haven't seen it in the data in the economic performal.

0:21:17.560 --> 0:21:19.760
<v Speaker 6>This is critical. We had green span of red chapter

0:21:19.840 --> 0:21:22.400
<v Speaker 6>twenty two and said, you know what, the stock market matters.

0:21:22.720 --> 0:21:25.439
<v Speaker 6>I believe we have a president who says the stock

0:21:25.480 --> 0:21:28.520
<v Speaker 6>market matters. Do you see evidence that this fed in

0:21:28.640 --> 0:21:32.120
<v Speaker 6>Chairman Powell care about that wealth effect.

0:21:33.240 --> 0:21:36.040
<v Speaker 10>They most certainly care about the wealth effect.

0:21:36.160 --> 0:21:36.719
<v Speaker 3>Understand it.

0:21:36.880 --> 0:21:39.520
<v Speaker 10>He answered that question when he got the question about

0:21:39.520 --> 0:21:44.119
<v Speaker 10>the earlier moves in the stock market on Monday, and

0:21:44.160 --> 0:21:49.280
<v Speaker 10>he talked about the persistency of the impact on financial conditions.

0:21:49.280 --> 0:21:52.040
<v Speaker 10>So there is the answer, right, They're not gonna worry

0:21:52.040 --> 0:21:55.080
<v Speaker 10>about one two days worth of selloffs. They're gonna look

0:21:55.080 --> 0:21:58.720
<v Speaker 10>at financial conditions and the wealth component, the stock market

0:21:58.760 --> 0:22:01.880
<v Speaker 10>component of that, the only thing that goes into financial conditions.

0:22:01.920 --> 0:22:04.399
<v Speaker 10>He was clear to highlight that the increase in interest

0:22:04.480 --> 0:22:07.320
<v Speaker 10>rates in the long end has been tightening financial conditions,

0:22:07.359 --> 0:22:10.840
<v Speaker 10>the impact on housing. But they're well aware of the impact.

0:22:10.440 --> 0:22:13.240
<v Speaker 3>Of wealth effect. But it's not a small move.

0:22:13.520 --> 0:22:15.720
<v Speaker 10>It's not an isolated move in one part of the

0:22:15.720 --> 0:22:18.520
<v Speaker 10>equity market. It has to be broad based, it has

0:22:18.600 --> 0:22:21.280
<v Speaker 10>to be persistent, and that's what we've seen in the

0:22:21.320 --> 0:22:25.359
<v Speaker 10>past of when you can flip the script on is

0:22:25.400 --> 0:22:29.280
<v Speaker 10>the economy driving markets or is the market driving the economy?

0:22:29.280 --> 0:22:32.080
<v Speaker 10>When the market has a big enough decline and it

0:22:32.280 --> 0:22:35.440
<v Speaker 10>impacts the wealth and confidence, then it's markets that then

0:22:35.560 --> 0:22:38.520
<v Speaker 10>lead the economy, and the FED will be having to

0:22:38.680 --> 0:22:41.240
<v Speaker 10>take that into account in their setting a policy.

0:22:41.359 --> 0:22:43.600
<v Speaker 1>All right, Fed, Chaer Rosenberg, I want to talk to

0:22:43.600 --> 0:22:46.359
<v Speaker 1>you about getting several steps ahead then of the Federal

0:22:46.400 --> 0:22:48.560
<v Speaker 1>Reserve as you figure out how to position.

0:22:48.800 --> 0:22:49.840
<v Speaker 5>What are you looking at?

0:22:49.880 --> 0:22:52.800
<v Speaker 1>What is your scenario analysis when the policies come down

0:22:52.800 --> 0:22:56.480
<v Speaker 1>the pike to understand whether they're going to be potentially inflationary,

0:22:56.520 --> 0:22:59.119
<v Speaker 1>whether they're going to be disinflationary, whether they can boost

0:22:59.160 --> 0:22:59.920
<v Speaker 1>growth or slow.

0:23:01.200 --> 0:23:04.840
<v Speaker 10>Yeah, it's about this kind of reaction function, and it's

0:23:04.880 --> 0:23:08.760
<v Speaker 10>a little bit about the assessment of the asymmetry to

0:23:08.840 --> 0:23:12.720
<v Speaker 10>the reaction function. You know, will they tolerate a little

0:23:12.720 --> 0:23:17.399
<v Speaker 10>bit of missing on the two percent inflation trajectory relative

0:23:17.520 --> 0:23:21.680
<v Speaker 10>to an outturn in labor market tightening? And so far,

0:23:22.040 --> 0:23:25.280
<v Speaker 10>I think that we've seen the Fed given the willingness

0:23:25.280 --> 0:23:27.760
<v Speaker 10>to cut interest rates. He got the question around you

0:23:27.800 --> 0:23:29.800
<v Speaker 10>have to wait till you hit two percent. No, we

0:23:29.800 --> 0:23:32.479
<v Speaker 10>already know the answers to that. They started cutting before

0:23:32.520 --> 0:23:34.480
<v Speaker 10>they got to two percent, So we know that the

0:23:34.520 --> 0:23:37.840
<v Speaker 10>Fed at least in the recent experience has been more

0:23:37.960 --> 0:23:43.560
<v Speaker 10>concerned about labor market tightening, the concern about over tightening.

0:23:43.600 --> 0:23:47.040
<v Speaker 10>The classical FED did it in terms of the create

0:23:47.200 --> 0:23:50.320
<v Speaker 10>causing the recession. That creates a little bit of asymmetry

0:23:50.359 --> 0:23:53.320
<v Speaker 10>of willingness to accept not getting to two percent, so

0:23:53.359 --> 0:23:56.560
<v Speaker 10>that your reaction, the Fed's reaction, my expectation around the

0:23:56.560 --> 0:23:59.639
<v Speaker 10>Fed's reaction to a weakening and labor markets might be

0:24:00.160 --> 0:24:03.919
<v Speaker 10>more to cut than the opposite of let's say the

0:24:03.920 --> 0:24:07.920
<v Speaker 10>inflation figures they start to, you know, instead of sticky,

0:24:07.960 --> 0:24:10.240
<v Speaker 10>it's sticky in a little bit upward. Is the FED

0:24:10.280 --> 0:24:11.800
<v Speaker 10>going to raise interest rates into that?

0:24:11.880 --> 0:24:12.440
<v Speaker 5>I think it's a.

0:24:12.480 --> 0:24:16.000
<v Speaker 10>Much higher bar. That asymmetry is kind of helpful to

0:24:16.119 --> 0:24:20.520
<v Speaker 10>positioning and fixed income in the FED centric kind of

0:24:21.280 --> 0:24:24.800
<v Speaker 10>maturity spectrum, kind of the short end of the intermediate

0:24:24.880 --> 0:24:26.400
<v Speaker 10>end of the curve that are going to be more

0:24:26.480 --> 0:24:29.400
<v Speaker 10>responsive to what the Fed's doing. And I think that's

0:24:29.440 --> 0:24:32.480
<v Speaker 10>the place where you have a little bit better assessment

0:24:32.600 --> 0:24:34.920
<v Speaker 10>because of this asymmetry between growth and inflation.

0:24:35.280 --> 0:24:37.960
<v Speaker 2>JEF always great to get your views, Appreciate them this afternoon.

0:24:37.960 --> 0:24:40.399
<v Speaker 2>Thank you, sir, Jeff Rosenberg. There a black rock on

0:24:40.400 --> 0:24:42.640
<v Speaker 2>the latest FED decision of course, it wasn't just about

0:24:42.640 --> 0:24:44.520
<v Speaker 2>the FED today, and Tom brought up the tech plays.

0:24:44.560 --> 0:24:47.439
<v Speaker 2>So we're here from Meta, Microsoft and Tesla of the

0:24:47.480 --> 0:24:49.000
<v Speaker 2>next few hours, and I want to bring you a

0:24:49.080 --> 0:24:53.280
<v Speaker 2>number from Deutsche Bank, Amazon, Microsoft, downflimat METSA expected to

0:24:53.320 --> 0:24:57.600
<v Speaker 2>surpass two hundred billion dollars in AI capex over the

0:24:57.600 --> 0:25:00.119
<v Speaker 2>course of the past year. That is real money. We've

0:25:00.119 --> 0:25:02.200
<v Speaker 2>talked a lot about the Federal Reserve's role in this economy.

0:25:02.240 --> 0:25:05.440
<v Speaker 2>Those tech players have a huge role in this economy.

0:25:05.160 --> 0:25:07.719
<v Speaker 1>On every level, and arguably some people could say that

0:25:07.960 --> 0:25:11.320
<v Speaker 1>chat GPT single handedly save the US from a technical corcession,

0:25:11.359 --> 0:25:13.439
<v Speaker 1>if not an outright de session, based on some of

0:25:13.440 --> 0:25:16.680
<v Speaker 1>the investments that have been made. You're right to focus

0:25:16.880 --> 0:25:19.920
<v Speaker 1>on big tech earnings because what this FED news conference

0:25:20.040 --> 0:25:21.800
<v Speaker 1>just showed us is that you're not going to learn

0:25:21.800 --> 0:25:24.560
<v Speaker 1>anything there, but you will learn from what you hear

0:25:24.880 --> 0:25:26.800
<v Speaker 1>from some of these executives in terms of how much

0:25:26.840 --> 0:25:29.200
<v Speaker 1>more they're going to keep investing and where they see

0:25:29.440 --> 0:25:30.840
<v Speaker 1>the gravitational str quickly.

0:25:30.840 --> 0:25:33.359
<v Speaker 6>Here there's a parallel to nineteen ninety five. I remember

0:25:33.359 --> 0:25:35.280
<v Speaker 6>the first time I heard the word Google. I was

0:25:35.320 --> 0:25:40.680
<v Speaker 6>like really, and uh yeah, sure, I didn't pony it up.

0:25:40.760 --> 0:25:43.480
<v Speaker 6>But the bottom line is John, as you're right, this

0:25:43.680 --> 0:25:46.760
<v Speaker 6>Capex overwhelms everything, and we're going to see that here

0:25:47.000 --> 0:25:48.960
<v Speaker 6>as we begin the tech derby with Microsoft.

0:25:49.000 --> 0:25:50.720
<v Speaker 2>We'll see if they can justify it, give them what

0:25:50.760 --> 0:25:52.600
<v Speaker 2>we found out on Monday. If that is in date,

0:25:53.000 --> 0:25:55.439
<v Speaker 2>the real tale coming up on the close, they'll follow

0:25:55.600 --> 0:25:58.080
<v Speaker 2>through with the Federal Reserve decision and go into the

0:25:58.119 --> 0:26:00.359
<v Speaker 2>close and pick up on a text story. Now doubt

0:26:00.480 --> 0:26:02.120
<v Speaker 2>we're going to catch up with Bessie Duke, the former

0:26:02.160 --> 0:26:04.320
<v Speaker 2>Federal Reserve governor, in just a moment. Like from New

0:26:04.359 --> 0:26:06.440
<v Speaker 2>York City this afternoon. Good afternoon to you all. Thank

0:26:06.480 --> 0:26:09.919
<v Speaker 2>you for choosing Bloomberg TV and Radio. This was the

0:26:09.960 --> 0:26:10.640
<v Speaker 2>FED Decides