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In the United States, the boss of the Fed, Jerome Powell, hardens the tone on inflation

First, at 2 p.m., Wednesday, January 26, there was the unsurprising press release from the American Federal Reserve (Fed, central bank), which would only increase its interest rates in March: “With inflation well above 2% and a strong labor market, the monetary policy committee [de l’institution] expects it will soon be appropriate to raise [le] federal funds rate. »

It was immediately a party on Wall Street, with a Nasdaq – the index rich in technology stocks – soaring up to 3.4% and the S&P 500, by 2.2%. Investors were convinced that with such a calming Fed, the stock market correction was over. On the CNBC economic channel, former governor of the monetary institution Robert Heller, a veteran of the Reagan years, belched at his former central banker peers: “They don’t have a backbone. The Fed needs to talk less and act more”, he railed, explaining that short-term rates should already be at 2% – they are now almost zero – and those in the long term better reflect inflation, which reached 7% in December 2021, a level unheard of for forty years.

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Then, starting at 2:30 p.m., there was a press conference in Washington by Fed Chairman Jerome Powell, who, in his own words, showed his determination to fight inflation. Wall Street was then disillusioned. The Nasdaq, after going into the red, ended the day on a minimal increase of 0.02%, while the S&P 500 fell 0.15%. The yield on ten-year rates rose from 1.77% to 1.87%, now very far from its low of 0.5%, hit in July 2020. “Dove” press conference, “Hawk” press conference, to use the bird names that characterize the supporters of an accommodating or rigorous monetary policy.

Jerome Powell has multiplied the indications showing that he would do everything to beat inflation. First, he did not rule out a half-point increase in its key rates at its meeting in March, while the operators are counting on a rise regulated like clockwork by a quarter of a point per meeting.

Towards monetary tightening that is no doubt more resolute

Then he reiterated that the scenario had nothing to do with the last credit crunch in 2015, during a lackluster recovery at the end of the Obama era, for three reasons: growth is now very strong – i.e. + 5.6% in 2021, against + 2.9% in 2015, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) –, full employment (3.8% of the labor force unemployed today, against 5 % seven years ago), and high inflation (+7% in December 2021, compared to 0.7% in 2015). “We are aware that this is a very different expansion”, Mr. Powell said, citing these three criteria, “and I think those differences will likely be reflected in the policy we implement”. Clearly, a monetary tightening without doubt more resolute.

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