Is Powell The Joker In The Fed’s Deck?

 | Jan 13, 2022 12:03AM ET

While gamblers returned to the stock market and their optimism helped uplift the PMs, Fed hawks were out in full force on Jan. 11. Thought market participants ignored their ominous warnings, the harsh realities will likely sink in over the medium term.

To explain, I wrote on Jan. 5:

"Investors have gotten so used to a dovish Fed that they assume Chairman Jerome Powell won’t follow through and raise interest rates. However, with rampant inflation, a hot labor market and a resilient U.S. economy still in play, the PMs may find out the hard way that the Fed isn’t bluffing."

To that point, Powell was questioned about monetary policy by the Senate Banking Committee on Jan. 11. He said:

“To get the kind of very strong labor market we want, with high participation, it is going to take a long expansion. To get a long expansion we are going to need price stability. And so in a way, high inflation is a severe threat to the achievement of maximum employment.”

Moreover, while I’m skeptical that Powell will be able to pull this rabbit out of his hat, he made it clear that quantitative tightening (selling assets and reducing the balance sheet) remains likely in 2022. He continued:

“The balance sheet is much bigger and so the runoff can be faster. So I would say sooner and faster – that much is clear.”

Thus, while another (likely) short squeeze helped uplift the S&P 500 and the PMs, and hurt the USD Index, the reality is that Powell was more hawkish on Jan. 11 than at any point in 2021.