|

Fed’s Goolsbee: “Inflation side of mandate is clearly the problem”

Federal Reserve (Fed) Bank of Chicago President Austan Goolsbee said on Thursday that inflation remains the central challenge for policymakers, warning that price pressure is still moving in the wrong direction despite some signs of improvement in services. He said that the Personal Consumption Expenditure (PCE) inflation report wasn’t “all negative” in an interview with CNBC.

Key takeaways:

Inflation is “going the wrong way,” and it remains difficult to determine how much of the current pressure is temporary and how much is persistent.

Some inflation pressure may be driven by one-off factors, but services inflation remains more concerning and “a little more disturbing.”

The PCE report “wasn’t all negative,” as Goolsbee noted some improvement in services, though inflation remains well above where it needs to be.

Core inflation is still “well too high” and trending in the wrong direction, keeping the inflation side of the Fed’s mandate as the main problem.

Goolsbee said he has long been uneasy with forward guidance and does not want to commit to forecasts years ahead, although he does not dislike the dot plot.

He welcomed the Fed Chair’s task force reviewing options around the dot plot and also applauded efforts to streamline the Fed statement.

On artificial intelligence, Goolsbee warned that if markets price in future productivity gains and consumers start spending based on those expectations, it could create overheating risks.

He added that spending today based on expected future gains makes him nervous about potential inflationary pressure.

Says wages are not a great leading indicator for inflation, warning that inflation could rise before wages move higher.”

Author

Agustin Wazne

Agustin Wazne joined FXStreet as a Junior News Editor, focusing on Commodities and covering Majors.

More from Agustin Wazne
Share:

Editor's Picks

GBP/USD advances as US Dollar remains subdued following US inflation data

GBP/USD rises for the second consecutive day, trading around 1.3400 during the Asian hours. The pair appreciates as the US Dollar holds losses following softer-than-expected US inflation data, fueling hopes that the US Federal Reserve might adopt a less hawkish monetary stance.

EUR/USD: Bulls remain cautious below 23.6% Fibo. and 1.1470 hurdle

The EUR/USD pair attracts some dip-buyers following the previous day's pullback from the 1.1460-1.1470 horizontal resistance, though it remains confined within a multi-week-old range. Spot prices trade around the 1.1435-1.1440 region during the Asian session on Wednesday, up for the second straight day amid modest US Dollar weakness.

Gold edges lower as elevated oil prices bolster Fed hike prospects and offset soft USD

Gold attracts some sellers after failing to find acceptance above the $4,100 mark the previous day, though it holds above the $4,000 psychological mark during the Asian session on Wednesday. Despite soft US Consumer Price Index data, investors remain worried about energy-driven inflation as escalating US-Iran tensions and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz remain supportive of elevated crude oil prices.

Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Ripple show tentative recovery as key technical levels hold

Bitcoin, Ethereum and Ripple trade with a mild positive bias on Wednesday as sentiment improves across the cryptocurrency market. BTC is testing its 50-day Exponential Moving Average, ETH has broken above a key resistance level at $1,800, while XRP has found support around a key level.

2% and nothing else: Why Warsh gave Congress three hours of Greenspan

The Federal Reserve Chair who wants the institution to say less spent Tuesday legally required to say more, on the one morning the data handed him something pleasant to say. June's Consumer Price Index fell 0.4% on the month, the steepest single-month decline since April 2020.

Five sessions, one round trip: Why the whipsaw is exactly what Warsh ordered

Markets opened July with a December hike as the base case and spent five trading sessions unlearning and relearning it. A 57K payrolls print bled the tightening bets out of the strip; a re-shut Strait of Hormuz is pushing them back in. Wednesday's minutes from the June FOMC meeting landed mid-round-trip, describing a world that had already stopped existing.