Fed’s Powell Expects Good Relations With Trump Administration

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell downplayed the prospects of tension with the incoming Trump administration and said he expects officials can move cautiously as they continue lowering interest rates.

“We can afford to be a little more cautious as we try to find neutral,” Powell said in reference to the level for rates that neither spurs nor restrains the economy.

The Fed’s preferred measure of underlying inflation accelerated in October on an annual basis, offering support for a careful approach to further reductions. Meanwhile, Powell noted downside risks to the jobs market appear to have receded.

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Policymakers will next meet Dec. 17-18 in Washington. The Fed chair didn’t say whether he favored cutting rates at that meeting.

Asked about the president-elect and Treasury nominee Scott Bessent, Powell expressed confidence he can work well with the incoming administration.

“I fully expect that we’ll have the same general kinds of relationships, institutional relationships, for example with the Council of Economic Advisers, but most importantly with the Treasury Department,” Powell said Wednesday at the New York Times DealBook Summit in New York.