Jerome Powell hints Fed may cut rates soon
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John Luke Tyner, head of fixed income at Aptus Capital Advisors, said Powell has accepted the market's argument that the labor market is weakening and that it is a larger threat to the economy than tariff-related inflation.
Wall Street on Friday notched its best day since late May, sparked by Federal Reserve interest rate cut expectations. Fed chair Jerome Powell at the Jackson Hole Economic Policy Symposium did not fully commit to cutting rates but did note that the downside risks to the labor market were increasing and that the "baseline outlook and the shifting
Fed Chair Powell sparked a big rally as he signaled the central bank could cut rates in September in his remarks at the Jackson Hole policy symposium.
Bond investors are heading into Friday’s much-anticipated Jerome Powell speech largely expecting the Federal Reserve chair will indicate policymakers will start cutting interest rates next month.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell is set to speak Friday in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, at a Fed research conference. As always, traders will be listening for hints about what might happen with interest rates at next month’s Fed meeting. That’s as a weakening labor market sets the backdrop.
If the famously data-dependent Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell shifts gears and takes a gloomier view of the job market, that could open the door for a rate cut at the Fed’s next meeting in September.