UPDATE 1-Fed's Powell had scant enthusiasm for QE3, transcripts show

By Kitco News / January 05, 2018 / www.kitco.com / Article Link

(Adds more comments, background)

By Ann Saphir, Lindsay Dunsmuir and Jason Lange

SAN FRANCISCO/WASHINGTON, Jan 5 (Reuters) - Jerome Powell, President Donald Trump's pick to lead the U.S. central bank starting next month, backed the Federal Reserve's third bond-buying program only reluctantly, transcripts released on Friday show.

"I'm supporting (the decision) with a certain lack of enthusiasm, and I am somewhat uncomfortable with the road that we are on," Powell said at the Fed's September 2012 meeting, when policymakers agreed to begin buying $40 billion in mortgage-backed securities a month to help keep interest rates low and boost hiring and investment.

Powell, 64, who joined the Fed in mid-2012, said little on the quantitative easing program publicly at the time, and the transcripts offer a look at the contrast between his lukewarm embrace of the stimulus and the full-throated support from Janet Yellen, who at the time was No. 2 on the Fed Board. Yellen is currently the Fed's chair, a position she took in 2014.

The Fed releases meeting transcripts with a five-year delay, and published those from 2012 on Friday.

"Absent further policy action, I see little chance that unemployment will decline in the foreseeable future," Yellen said at the same September 2012 meeting, according to the transcript. "We should not delay action any further."

Powell's views since appear to have moved closer to those of Yellen, who fought for aggressive use of Fed stimulus to help fuel job creation.

Even over his first six months on the job in 2012, his views of the economic outlook appear to have evolved. At first he was decidedly more optimistic about the economy than some of his colleagues as they debated expanding the Fed's stimulus programs to combat an unemployment rate stuck above 8 percent.

"I am simply not persuaded that the slowdown will carry into 2013," Powell said at the Fed's June 2012 meeting, citing generally upbeat economic assessments from his "contacts in the industrial patch."

At the same meeting, Yellen characterized economic data since the prior meeting as "almost uniformly discouraging" and Ben Bernanke, the Fed's chairman at the time, said he agreed with Governor Daniel Tarullo that the economy was "stuck in the mud."

EVOLVING VIEW

By December, Powell said he was no longer convinced there would be much improvement in 2013, though he said he hoped there would be some in the second half.

Throughout this initial period at the Fed, Powell leaned heavily on his own conversations with investors and businessmen, an approach that differed from Yellen's own highly technical analysis.

Powell joined the Fed board in May 2012 after a career in investment banking, including as a partner at private equity firm The Carlyle Group.

In the transcripts, Powell said at the September meeting that private equity investors appeared eager to snap up U.S. companies, which suggested the economy was still on good long-term footing.

"They're seeing something. They really are," he said.

Yellen backed her argument for aggressive action in September with a technical argument that the weakness in the labor market could become ingrained in the economy, citing a relatively arcane economics concept known as "hysteresis."

The transcripts also show that while Powell allowed himself to be persuaded to support the Fed's bond-buying program in the end, he continued to be dogged by what he called in December his "misgivings" about creating what he worried would be an overly large Fed balance sheet.


<^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Graphic-Federal Reserve Governor Powell's policy views, in his own words Interactive graphic on Fed's doves and hawks ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>(Reporting by Ann Saphir in San Francisco and Lindsay Dunsmuir and Jason Lange in Washington; Editing by Andrea Ricci)

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are those of the author and may not reflect those of Kitco Metals Inc. The author has made every effort to ensure accuracy of information provided; however, neither Kitco Metals Inc. nor the author can guarantee such accuracy. This article is strictly for informational purposes only. It is not a solicitation to make any exchange in commodities, securities or other financial instruments. Kitco Metals Inc. and the author of this article do not accept culpability for losses and/ or damages arising from the use of this publication.

Recent News

Canada second most significant player in global mining M&A

July 22, 2024 / www.canadianminingreport.com

Plenty of potential for continued rotation out of tech

July 22, 2024 / www.canadianminingreport.com

Platinum to palladium ratio low, platinum to gold high, versus history

July 15, 2024 / www.canadianminingreport.com

Gold stocks up on metal and equities gains

July 15, 2024 / www.canadianminingreport.com

Most major metals rebound on potential global monetary easing

July 09, 2024 / www.canadianminingreport.com
See all >
Share to Youtube Share to Facebook Facebook Share to Linkedin Share to Twitter Twitter Share to Tiktok