The Fed Doesn’t Care About Wall Street as Much as Wall Street Thinks

  • Traders are amused by Powell’s view on financial conditions
  • He appears to focus a lot less on market moves than they do
El-Erian: Markets Doubt Fed's Ability to Hit 2% Target
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There’s something of a ritual performed each time Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell speaks to the press: A reporter asks Powell about financial conditions; he says they’ve tightened a lot; the Wall Street crowd snickers.

To them, the notion seems ludicrous. Notwithstanding the selloff the past few weeks, markets have rallied in start-and-stop spurts for four months, swelling equity valuations and making it easier for companies to raise cash in stock and bond markets. The implication is that the Fed is letting investors undermine its efforts to choke off the flow of money and tame inflation.