Never mind conventions: Why Powell's the main event

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Aug 23, 2024 View in browser
 
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By Victoria Guida and Sam Sutton

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QUICK FIX

JACKSON HOLE, Wyoming — Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell will give a speech this morning that, for global investors, is the most consequential one of the week. (No offense, Kamala Harris).

The central bank’s annual confab in Grand Teton National Park offers the Fed chief a venue to speak with a wider lens about what’s ahead for the world’s largest economy, and for the past couple of years, that has put inflation center stage.

No more.

Fed officials are increasingly confident that inflation is moving back to their 2 percent target, and that means Powell will likely focus much of his remarks on prospects for the job market instead. Remember, we haven’t actually heard from him since we got the last monthly employment report – a disappointing number that sparked market turbulence worldwide – nor since the Labor Department said it probably overstated job growth by more than 800,000 over the 12 months ending in March.

That latter point might not matter hugely to the Fed’s outlook — officials including Powell in recent months have said they thought those numbers were probably overstated. But it still adds to a picture of a job market that’s weakening, even if unemployment is still low by historical standards.

Nela Richardson, chief economist at ADP, told MM said she hoped that Powell would provide more clarity on what a healthy picture on inflation and employment looks like to the Fed, given the upside-down world we find ourselves in — where 4.3 percent unemployment looks worse because it was previously as low as 3.4 percent.

“Give us a sense of what we’re shooting for,” she said.

Your MM host landed in Jackson, Wyo., to see smoke from wildfires clouding the vista — perhaps a metaphor for the hazy outlook as the central bank transitions away from its inflation fight.

The Fed is almost certain to cut interest rates in September, though to what extent will depend on how much the data worsens between now and then. We’ve got another jobs report in a couple of weeks, after all.

Rate cuts would offer some much-needed relief to the housing market — data last week showed monthly housing starts at their lowest level since May 2020.

But lower rates would also provide a boost to household borrowers paying down credit card balances. It would make it easier for businesses to refinance existing debt and lower government borrowing costs. Or, to put it more simply, it would begin to ease some of the strain that the Fed’s restrictive policies had placed on the economy.

Which brings us to the 2024 presidential campaign: After two months of turmoil, Harris formally ascended to the top of the Democratic ticket on Thursday night. The race will now increasingly be defined by how she and former President Donald Trump articulate their plans to guide the economy through the post-inflation era.

Their plans might not matter much. Instead, that era will be defined by how Powell & Co. navigate interest rate policy over the next several months.

“Harris has gotten a lot of attention for the policy proposals she’s rolled out over the past two weeks, but she’s not realistically going to be able to do most of what she’s proposing,” said Tobin Marcus, head of U.S. policy and politics at Wolfe Research and a former adviser to President Joe Biden. “Powell, on the other hand, is making decisions in real-time with major implications for the economy—but he probably won’t have 20 million-plus viewers tuning in!”

IT’S FRIDAY — Morning Money’s off next week. But your hosts are still (mostly) working. If you’ve got tips, send those to Victoria at vguida@politico.com and Sam at ssutton@politico.com.

 

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Driving the Day

Powell speaks at Jackson Hole at 10 a.m. … New home sales for July will be released at 10 a.m. …

Kamala’s big night — Harris used her acceptance speech to frame the election as “a precious, fleeting opportunity to move past the bitterness, cynicism and divisive battles of the past, a chance to chart a new way forward.”

— A big part of that “way forward” was what Harris dubbed the “opportunity economy.” That umbrella term includes many of the priorities she’s identified repeatedly during her brief campaign, including lowering health care and grocery costs. It also includes providing “access to capital for small business owners and entrepreneurs and founders,” she said, as well as her plans to “end America’s housing shortage.”

— The campaign provided more details on some of those policies in the run-up to last week’s economic policy speech in North Carolina. Harris did not delve into specifics on Thursday night, instead using the “opportunity economy” framework to contrast her platform against Trump’s. She took specific aim at his plans to lower taxes for corporations and impose universal tariffs — she labeled them a “national sales tax” — that would raise prices on household goods.

— Prior to Harris’s speech, Bloomberg’s Big Take was that the convention reflected a party that is holding together a coalition with a message of “hope and joy, wrapped in memes, and served with a side of Beyoncé’s Freedom. What it has avoided is providing economic policy specifics that could pit one faction against another.”

Barr to host Vance in Kentucky – Eleanor Mueller reports: GOP vice presidential nominee JD Vance will head to Lexington, Ky., on Monday for a fundraiser alongside House Financial Services gavel hopeful Rep. Andy Barr.

A finalized invitation obtained by POLITICO lists tickets starting at $2,500 a person. The event has already brought in more than $1 million, a person briefed on the plans said, including $700,000 from Barr and the rest of the host committee.

Vance declined a request for comment.

Barr and Rep. French Hill (R-Ark.) have become their conference's highest-contributing members as they compete with Reps. Bill Huizenga (R-Mich.) and Frank Lucas (R-Okla.) to replace retiring House Financial Services Chair Patrick McHenry (R-N.C.). Barr is closely aligned with GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump, including on issues like establishing greater oversight of the Federal Reserve.

Vance "knows our region well," Barr told Eleanor. "With JD on the ticket, we can trust that our concerns will be front and center in Washington."

 

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The Economy

When Doves Cry (gradually, softly) — Boston Fed President Susan Collins and Philadelphia Fed President Patrick Harker both signaled that the central bank should lower rates in a gradual and methodical manner, according to Bloomberg’s Jonnelle Marte and Reade Pickert.

— Collins also warned against “self-fulfilling” pessimism when it comes to the state of the U.S. economy, per The FT.

What the numbers are telling us The number of Americans who filed for unemployment benefits was slightly higher last week, but totals “appear to be steadying near a level consistent with a gradual cooling of the labor market,” according to Reuters.

Meanwhile, home sales are starting to climb as mortgage rates continue to fade, according to The WSJ’s Nicole Friedman. Freddie Mac on Thursday reported that the average rate on 30-year fixed-rate mortgages has dipped to 6.46 percent.

Trouble ahead? Trouble behind? — A Teamsters Canada labor dispute shuttered both of Canada’s major railways early Thursday, sending shockwaves through global supply chains, POLITICO’s Kyle Dugan reports.

— The Canadian government stepped in hours later. Labor Minister Steven MacKinnon said Thursday he’s ordered a labor relations board to impose binding arbitration, and that he’s “confident” it will end the strike within days, Duggan reports.

 

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The Consumer

Downshift — The U.S. economy’s resilience over the last two years has been powered by consumer spending. Americans still have money to burn, but they’re increasingly looking for discounts.

Companies like Target and McDonald’s have been reducing prices to address how consumer demand is shifting after two years of elevated inflation and higher borrowing costs. Bank of America card data shows that household spending on discount retail — particularly for apparel— has increased at a faster rate than overall retail spending since mid-2022.

That trend is in keeping with Vice President Harris’s messaging around high prices and affordability. But the pain, at least up until now, has largely been felt by low and moderate-income consumers. And corporate earnings have started to reflect the divide between haves and have-nots, Oaktree Capital Management’s Danielle Poli tells MM.

Financial results for retail that already catered to low- and moderate-income households have started to show signs of weakness, she wrote in a recent research note alongside Armen Panossian. The trend is visible in the earnings reports of certain fast food companies as well.

“If you don't have consumers switching down — and you're losing your core base — are you in trouble? I think you're starting to see that with some companies’ earnings, like McDonald's, where you have lower traffic and you have lower sales,” she said, adding: “What I worry about is: Will those lower-income consumers even be able to continue to afford McDonald's? Would they rather stay at home?”

Congress

NIMBY No-go Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.) says that housing policy will be a top priority at House Financial Services if Democrats secure a majority and she takes back the gavel next year, Eleanor reports. “We’ve got to deal with the NIMBYs — 'not in my backyard,'” the California Democrat told her state's delegation on the sidelines of the DNC in Chicago.

 

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Fly Around

Disaster — British tech billionaire Mike Lynch, Morgan Stanley International Chair Jonathan Bloomer and others were killed after a yacht sank off the coast of Italy during a severe storm. The 22-passenger outing had been intended as a celebration of Lynch’s recent acquittal of fraud charges, Bloomberg reports. At least 15 passengers, including Lynch’s wife, survived the disaster, according to NPR.

Family business — Trump promoted his sons’ nascent crypto venture in a social media post on Thursday, Jasper Goodman reports. The former president has been courting the industry’s support for his campaign. “For too long, the average American has been squeezed by the big banks and financial elites,” Trump wrote. “It's time we take a stand—together.”

 

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