
Powell: The hard data of the U.S. economy is very robust, and the "baseline" forecast still indicates that tariffs have a "temporary" impact on inflation

Powell stated that the Federal Reserve's upward adjustment of inflation expectations is "largely" due to tariffs, and long-term inflation expectations remain stable, allowing the Fed to overlook the impact of tariffs on inflation; part of it is due to tariffs, and the progress of inflation decline this year may be delayed. It is still too early to predict the significant impact of Trump's policies on economic data; the risk of recession "has increased somewhat, but is still not high." External forecasters have raised the likelihood of a recession, which remains at a "relatively mild level." Powell remains optimistic about the employment outlook, stating that the unemployment rate is "very close to its natural level"; the softness in such survey data may be related to the turbulence during the early days of Trump's administration, and the University of Michigan's inflation expectations data is an "outlier," while hard data indicates that the economy is "healthy." Slowing down the balance sheet reduction has not released any signals, and slowing down can allow QT to last longer. Removing the rhetoric about balancing employment and inflation risks does not mean greater concern about related risks. After Powell mentioned the impact of tariffs on inflation, the two-year U.S. Treasury yield fell below 4%
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