Powell Places His First Step On The Stairs Of Hopeful Monetary Policy
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The current adventures in monetary policy take me back to the early pandemic times when inflation was soaring, some Fed critics were claiming that inflation would take care of itself, and rate hikes in response to inflation would crash the economy. Today, after two years since the last rate hike and almost a year since the first rate cut, the growing rancor predicts the economy will roll over if (rapid) rate cuts do not resume yesterday. Feeling both the economic and the political pressure, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell finally conceded to taking his first step on the stairs of hopeful monetary policy.
In his speech at the annual Jackson Hole confab, Powell acknowledged that “with policy in restrictive territory, the baseline outlook and the shifting balance of risks may warrant adjusting our policy stance” (emphasis mine). In normal times, with this ever so slight tweak in Powell’s inclinations and probabilities coming at the end of a long explanation of the balance of risks to inflation, employment, and the economy, this concession could be interpreted as another tease in the on-going suspense and fight over rate cuts. Instead, a stock market ever more eager for rate cuts built a temple from a single stair step and responded with one of the biggest expansions in market breadth that I have ever seen.
Maintaining high odds of a September rate cut will effectively force the Fed to cut. However, if Powell stays on message – “monetary policy is not on a preset course” – then the September rate cut could easily lead to a major disappointment. The Fed’s voting majority may not be ready to promise a sustained rate cutting cycle because inflation remains a nagging problem for the Fed.
Even before the tariff drama, trauma, and noise, inflation was proving itself sticky and stubborn. Now, core CPI (Consumer Price Index) and core PCE (Personal Consumption Expenditures), the Fed’s preferred inflation measure, look like they have bottomed. Core CPI has even started heading upward largely thanks to a lift in services inflation. As a result, not only is the Fed looking to cut rates well short of its 2% (core PCE) target but also just as inflation’s downtrend is taking an extended pause.
Both core CPI and core PCE have bottomed out since last year.
Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, Personal Consumption Expenditures Excluding Food and Energy (Chain-Type Price Index) [PCEPILFE], retrieved from FRED; U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers: All Items Less Food and Energy in U.S. City Average [CPILFESL], retrieved from FRED, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, August 25, 2025.
A suddenly very hot Producer Price Index (PPI) from July promises that subsequent CPI reads will not deliver inflation relief.
The Producer Price Index (PPI) surged in July after a year of relative stability in the monthly changes.
Moreover, tariff-driven inflation is already showing up both in the anecdotes from business leaders, earnings reports, and the Fed’s own research. Moreover, even though the Fed Funds rate is still in restrictive territory, financial conditions are not tight. In fact, financial conditions were last this loose right before the Fed belatedly started hiking rates in early 2022.
Who is crying out for loans with financial conditions this loose?
All together, these stories provide cautionary tales for rate cuts. The confidence I observe in the “rate-cutters” shows insufficient deference to the stagflationary possibilities in the economy. Powell characterized the potential as “a challenging situation” after he finished explaining how “in the near term, risks to inflation are tilted to the upside, and risks to employment to the downside”. This position between a rock and a hard place motivates me to tighten my grip on my position in Goldman Sachs Access Inflation Protected USD Bond ETF (GTIP).
A Swirl Of Claims and Counterclaims
At this point, every one has an opinion on what the Fed needs to do. I have taken note of some key interviews and speeches to portray the painful complexity of the task ahead for the Federal Reserve. Anyone who claims with confidence that the Fed should do “X” is glossing over some part of this picture.
Cleveland President Beth Hammack Leans Against A Rate Cut
Interviews like the one with Cleveland President Beth Hammack formed part of the reason the stock market got caught leaning away from Powell’s first step on the stairs of hopeful monetary policy. A day before Powell’s speech, Hammack insisted that “with the data in hand right now, if the meeting was tomorrow, I would not see a case for reducing interest rates”. She warned that her “biggest concern is that inflation has been too high for the past 4 years. And right now it has been trending in the wrong direction [see chart above]. It’s important we stay modestly restrictive to make sure inflation is brought back under control” (Hammack’s predecessor expressed similar concerns earlier in the month).
Hammack also worried that the inflationary impact of tariffs are just getting started and will continue into Q1 and Q2 of next year given the timing of contract renewals. These worries did not sound like the setup for an incrementally conciliatory Powell.
Hammack also stated that “financial conditions are broadly supportive of the economy” (consistent with the ANFCI). Moreover, she is “not hearing interest rates are a huge problem”. The builders and businesses building new plants in Hammack’s district are complaining just as much about the cost of materials and labor as they are about high interest rates. In a case for future inflationary pressures, manufacturers in the Cleveland district have been buffering price increases but cannot not sustain the hits “forever”.
I surmise Hammack will vote against a rate hike in September. Will she suddenly find herself on the dissenting side of the ledger?
Former St. Louis Fed President Jim Bullard Bolsters Candidacy As Next Fed Chair
Candidates for position of the next Fed Chair share a common trait. They think tariffs will not cause lasting inflation and support cutting rates right away. Former St. Louis Fed President Jim Bullard is a recent add to the candidate list. In a CNBC interview on August 12, Bullard insisted tariffs do not cause inflation. Tariffs are a tax and taxes do not cause inflation (a common equivalence). He pointed to data showing very muted effects and claimed that tariffs are not interrupting the longer-term trend to 2% inflation. Like other supporters of rate cuts, Bullard is looking well beyond the current swirl of data and glancing at the top of the stairs of hopeful monetary policy.
Council of Economic Advisers Chair Stephen Miran Asks “What Inflation”?
Council of Economic Advisers Chair Stephen Miran is also on the list of potential candidates to next head the Fed. Miran appeared on CNBC the same day as Bullard to discuss the economy. By narrowing his view to inflation since inauguration, Miran calculated a 1.9% annualized rate of inflation (I assume this was a reference to headline inflation). He further insisted that there “continues to be no evidence whatsoever of tariff-induced inflation”, and he implied that there will be no evidence for future impacts either. Ultimately, exporters will bear the cost of tariffs because they are the least flexible part of the supply chain; Americans will just buy elsewhere or make formerly imported goods domestically (do exporting countries doing deals understand their ultimate doom?).
When asked about the bottoming in core inflation, Miran dismissed the dynamic because tariffs are not the culprit. Miran pointed to used cars and airfares as core drivers. He went on to finger illegal immigration for boosting rents by 4-5%. Thus, net services inflation will go to zero because of the current crackdown on illegal residency.
Miran stands confidently at the top of the stairs of hopeful monetary policy. I am guessing he is a front-runner in the race for Fed Chair.
Gold Paralyzed With Indecision?
The price of gold has largely stopped responding to the back and forth in inflation-related data and opinions on monetary policy. While the SPDR Gold Trust (GLD) increased 1.1% in the wake of Powell’s first step on the stairs of hopeful monetary policy, GLD remains firmly stuck in a 4-month trading range. A technical “bearish engulfing” pattern in April continues to loom over the trading action as a top. Still, I am betting on GLD responding bullishly to the next rate cut just as it did to the last one. GLD is up 30% after initially selling off in response to what was thought to be a hawkish rate cut at the time.
SPDR Gold Trust (GLD) has been pivoting around its 50DMA as part of a trading range extending away from its April topping pattern.
I have been holding a GLD calendar call spread for the last half or so of this trading range while rolling forward the expiring short ends of the spread. I plan to convert this position to an outright call spread ahead of the September Fed meeting.
Be careful out there!
More By This Author:
Powell’s Promises: Containing Tariff-Driven Inflation And Risks To Dual Mandate
July Beige Book: Increased Odds For More Rapid Rise In Consumer Prices
Tom Lee Dismisses Tariff Inflation — But Data, Theory, And Research Say Otherwise