Transcript

Opening Statement

Good afternoon. My colleagues and I remain squarely focused on our dual mandate to promote maximum employment and stable prices for the American people. The economy has made considerable progress toward our dual-mandate objectives. Inflation has eased substantially, while the labor market has remained strong. And that is very good news. But inflation is still too high. Ongoing progress in bringing it down is not assured, and the path forward is uncertain. We are fully committed to returning inflation to our 2% goal. Restoring price stability is essential to achieve a sustainably strong labor market that benefits all. Today the FOMC decided to leave our policy interest rate unchanged and to continue to reduce our securities holdings. Our restrictive stance of monetary policy has been putting downward pressure on economic activity and inflation. As labor-market tightness has eased and progress on inflation has continued, the risks to achieving our employment and inflation goals are moving into better balance. I’ll have more to say about monetary policy after briefly reviewing economic developments.

Recent indicators suggest that economic activity has been expanding at a solid pace. GDP growth in the fourth quarter of last year came in at 3.2 percent. For 2023 as a whole, GDP expanded 3.1 percent, bolstered by strong consumer demand as well as improving supply conditions. Activity in the housing sector was subdued over the past year, largely reflecting high mortgage rates. High interest rates also appear to have weighed on business fixed investment. In our Summary of Economic Projections, committee participants generally expect GDP growth to slow from last year’s pace, with a median projection of 2.1 percent this year and 2% over the next two years. Participants generally revised up their growth projections since December, reflecting the strength of incoming data, including data on labor supply. The labor market remains relatively tight, but supply and demand conditions continue to come into better balance. Over the past three months, payroll job gains averaged 265,000 jobs per month. The unemployment rate has edged up but remains low at 3.9 percent. Strong job creation has been accompanied by an increase in the supply of workers, reflecting increases in participation among individuals aged 25 to 54 years, and a continued strong pace of immigration. Nominal wage growth has been easing and job vacancies have declined. Although the jobs-to-workers gap has narrowed, labor demand still exceeds the supply of available workers. FOMC participants expect the rebalancing in the labor market to continue, easing upward pressure on inflation. Inflation has eased notably over the past year but remains above our longer-run goal of 2%. The median projection in the SEP for total PCE inflation falls to 2.4 percent this year, 2.2 percent next year, and 2% in 2026. The Fed’s monetary policy actions are guided by our mandate to promote maximum employment and stable prices for the American people. We are strongly committed to returning inflation to our 2% objective. The committee decided at today’s meeting to maintain the target range for the federal-funds rate at 5 ¼ to 5 ½ percent, and to continue the process of significantly reducing our securities holdings. As labor market tightness has eased and progress on inflation has continued, the risks to achieving our employment and inflation goals are coming into better balance. We believe that our policy rate is likely at its peak for this tightening cycle, and that, if the economy evolves broadly as expected, it will likely be appropriate to begin dialing back policy restraint at some point this year. The economic outlook is uncertain, however, and we remain highly attentive to inflation risks. We are prepared to maintain the current target range of the federal-funds rate for longer, if appropriate.

We know that reducing policy restraint too soon or too much could result in a reversal of the progress we have seen on inflation, and ultimately require even tighter policy to get inflation back to 2%. At the same time, reducing policy restraint too late or too little could unduly weaken economic activity and employment. In considering any adjustments to the target range for the federal-funds rate, the committee will carefully assess incoming data, the evolving outlook, and the balance of risks. The committee does not expect it will be appropriate to reduce the target range until it has gained greater confidence that inflation is moving sustainably down toward 2%. Of course, we’re committed to both sides of our dual mandate, and an unexpected weakening in the labor market could also warrant a policy response. We will continue to make our decisions meeting by meeting.

In our SEP, FOMC participants wrote down their individual assessments of an appropriate path for the federal-funds rate, based on what each participant judges to be the most likely scenario going forward. If the economy evolves as projected, the median participant projects that the appropriate level of the federal-funds rate will be 4.6 percent at the end of this year, 3.9 percent at the end of 2025, and 3.1 percent at the end of 2026, still above the medium—median longer-term funds rate. These projections are not a committee decision, or a plan. If the economy does not evolve as projected, the path for policy will adjust as appropriate to foster our maximum employment and price stability goals.

Turning to our balance sheet, our securities holdings have declined by nearly $1.5 trillion since the committee began reducing our portfolio. At this meeting, we discussed issues related to slowing the pace of decline in our securities holdings. While we did not make any decisions today on this, the general sense of the committee is that it will be appropriate to slow the pace of runoff fairly soon, consistent with the plans we previously issued. The decision to slow the pace of runoff does not mean that our balance sheet will ultimately shrink by less than it would otherwise, but rather allows us to approach that ultimate level more gradually. In particular, slowing the pace of runoff will help ensure a smooth transition, reducing the possibility that money markets experience stress, and thereby facilitating the ongoing decline in our securities holdings, consistent with reaching the appropriate level of ample reserves.

To conclude, we understand that our actions affect communities, families, and businesses across the country. Everything we do is in service to our public mission. We at the Fed will do everything we can to achieve our maximum employment and price stability goals.

Q&A

Q: Thank you. A mic for me. Steve Liesman, CNBC.Mr. Chairman, the projections show somewhat higher core inflation. They also show somewhat stronger growth.What should we infer from this notion that on average rates were kept the same this year but inflation is higher and growth is higher? Does it mean more tolerance for higher inflation and less of a willingness to slow the economy to achieve that target?

MR. POWELL: Well, it doesn’t—no, it doesn’t mean that. What it means is that, you know, we’ve seen incoming—as I pointed out in my opening remarks we did mark up our growth forecast and so have many other forecasters. So the economy is performing well, and the inflation data came in a little bit higher as a separate matter and I think that caused people to write up their inflation.

But, nonetheless, we continue to make good progress on bringing inflation down and so—

Q: When you—just to follow up, when you say that you’re willing to either maintain the rate for longer what is the tolerance of the Federal Reserve for inflation coming in above its 2% target?

MR. POWELL: We’re strongly committed to bringing inflation down to 2% over time. That is our goal and we will achieve that goal. Markets believe we will achieve that goal and they should believe that because that’s what will happen over time. But we stress over time, and so I think we’re making projections that do show that happening and we’re committed to that outcome and we will bring it about.

Q: Hi, Chair Powell. Rachel Siegel from the Washington Post. Thanks for taking our questions. You and others have been saying that relief on housing inflation is coming but it still hasn’t shown up meaningfully in the CPI or the PCE. Does that challenge your assumption about when the shift will finally break through since it hasn’t at that point?

MR. POWELL: So I think there’s some confidence that the market rents—lower market rent increases that we’re seeing will show up in measures of housing services inflation over time. There’s a little bit of uncertainty about when that will happen but there’s real confidence that they will show up eventually over time. But, again, uncertainty about the exact timing of that.

Q: OK. And will you be able to get overall inflation down to target if housing doesn’t break through quickly and does that affect the timing for eventual cuts this year?

MR. POWELL: We will get aggregate inflation down to 2% over time. We will, and I would assume what we’ll continue to see is we’ll see goods prices coming into a new equilibrium where they’re going down perhaps not as quickly as they had been earlier this year, where housing services inflation will come back down as current market rents are suggesting will happen, and where non-housing services will move back down—some combination of those three things. And it may be different from the combination we had before the pandemic will be achieved and will bring inflation back down to 2% sustainably.

Q: Nick Timiraos of The Wall Street Journal. Chair Powell, during your congressional testimony this month you said that your test for making the first change to interest rates does not require you to be terribly comfortable that inflation is at 2% because interest rates are well above neutral. At the same time, you said here after the last meeting that the first cut is highly consequential.Can you reconcile these views for me? If rates are well above neutral, why would the first cut be highly consequential? Is that because you anticipate one cut would be followed by one or two more along the lines of the recalibration you made in 2019, which itself was modeled on the midcycle adjustment of 1995?

MR. POWELL: It’s more—I would put it more in the context of what I said in our—in my opening remarks, that the risks are really two sided here. We’re in a situation where, you know, if we ease too much or too soon we could see inflation come back and if we ease too late we could do unnecessary harm to employment and, you know, people’s working lives.

And so, you know, we do see the risks as two sided so it is consequential. We want to be careful. Unfortunately, with the economy growing, with the labor market strong, with inflation coming down, we can approach that question carefully and let the data speak on that. That’s really what I was thinking.

Q: How much of the inflation that we’ve seen so far this year do you chalk up to one-off calendar adjustment effects following a period of high inflation versus some change in the trend we saw in the second half of last year?

MR. POWELL: So I want to start by being—saying I always try to be careful about dismissing data that we don’t like. So you need to check yourself on that and I’ll do that.

But I would say the January number which was very high—the January CPI and PCE numbers were quite high. There’s reason to think that there could be seasonal effects there. But, nonetheless, we don’t want to be completely dismissive of it.

The February number was high, higher than expectations, but we have it at currently well below 30 basis points core PCE, which is not terribly high. So it’s not like the January number.
But I take the two of them together and I think they haven’t really changed the overall story, which is that of inflation moving down gradually on a sometimes bumpy road toward 2%. I don’t think that story has changed. I also don’t think that those readings added to anyone’s confidence that we’re moving closer to that point.

But, you know, we didn’t—the last thing I’ll say is we didn’t excessively celebrate the good inflation readings we got in the last seven months of last year. We didn’t take too much signal out of that. What you heard us saying was that we needed to see more that we could—you know, we wanted to be careful about that decision. And we’re not going to overreact as well to these two months of data, nor are we going to ignore them.

Q: Hi, Chair Powell. Could you speak a little bit more about the timing? Is there enough data between now and, say, May to be able to get the kind of confidence that you say that, you know, you still need, or by June is there enough data for you? Just give us a sense of your thinking there.

MR. POWELL: Yeah. So we make decisions meeting by meeting. And we didn’t make any decisions about future meetings today. Those are going to depend on our ongoing assessment of the incoming data, the evolving outlook at the balance of risks. So I really don’t have anything for you on any specific meeting looking forward.

Q: I mean, just the question of—I mean, is there even enough data for you to be able to—

MR. POWELL: We’ll take—you know, things can happen during an intermeeting period, if you look back; unexpected things. So I don’t want to—I wouldn’t want to dismiss anything. So I just would say that the committee wants to see more data that gives us higher confidence that inflation is moving down sustainably toward 2%.

I also mentioned—and we don’t see this in the data right now—but if there were a significant weakening in the data, particularly in the labor market, that could also be a reason for us to begin the process of reducing rates again. There’s nothing in the data pointing at that, but those are the things that we’ll be looking at at coming meetings, and without trying to refer to any specific meeting.

Q: Hi. Chris Rubager over at Associated Press. Thank you. In the projections, there is an increase in the neutral rate, as you know, and higher rates, quarter-point higher rates projected in 2025-26. Can you speak about what might be behind that? Is there a real sense here that the economy has perhaps changed in some way that higher rates will be needed in the future?

MR. POWELL: So you’re right. They’re pretty modest changes. But you’re right. There was an uptick in the longer-run rate, and also there’s a 25-basis-point increase in ’25 and ’26. In terms of are rates going to be higher in the longer run, if that’s really your question, I don’t think we know that. I think it’s—we think that rates were generally low during the prepandemic, post-global-financial crisis era for reasons that are mostly, you know, important, slow-moving, large things like demographics and productivity and that sort of thing, things that don’t move quickly.

But I don’t think we know. I mean, my instinct would be that rates will not go back down to the very low levels that we saw where all around the world there were long-run rates that were at or below zero in some cases. I don’t see rates going back down to that level. But I think there’s tremendous uncertainty around that.

Q: Great. And just a quick follow. On the projections, you also have 2.6 percent core inflation for the end of this year. It’s already at—you mentioned it being 2.8 in February. I mean, that doesn’t sound like much disinflation at all. So are you really—are you still confident? Or at the last press conference you sounded pretty optimistic you would get more confidence at the end of this year. Is it right to say that this suggests you’re not seeing a lot of disinflation this year compared to what we’ve seen 2023 and so forth?

MR. POWELL: So I think that that higher year-end number reflects the data we’ve seen so far this year, because you’re now—you’re now in this year. So I think that—sorry, say the last part of your question again?

Q: Well, just are you still optimistic that you’ll get the confidence you need this year?

MR. POWELL: Ah. You know, I think if you look at—if you look at the SEP, what it says is that it is still likely in most people’s view that we will achieve that confidence and that there will be rate cuts. But that’s really going to depend on the incoming data. The other thing is, in the second half of the year you have some pretty low readings. So it might be harder to make progress as you move that 12-month window forward. Nonetheless, we’re looking for data that confirm the kind of low readings that we had last year, and give us a higher degree of confidence that what we saw was really inflation moving sustainably down to 2%—toward 2%.

Q: Jeanna Smialek with the New York Times. Thank you for taking our questions. Per your comment to Ann that a weakening in the labor market would be a reason to potentially cut rates, or at least a consideration in making a rate cut, would continued strength in the labor market be a reason to hold off on rate cuts? And just in general, if labor supply continued to rebound in 2024 the way it did in 2023, what would stronger hiring and possibly stronger growth mean for the path forward on policy?

MR. POWELL: Yeah, so if we’re—if what we’re getting is a lot of supply and a lot of demand, and that supply is actually feeding demand because workers are getting paid and they’re spending and that’s—you know, what you would have is potentially kind of what you had last year, which is a bigger economy where inflationary pressures are not increasing. In fact, they were decreasing. So you can have that if you have the continued supply-side activity that we had last year with—both with supply chains and also with growth in the size of the labor force.

Q: But so strong hiring in and of itself would not be a reason to hold off on rate cuts?

MR. POWELL: No. Not all by itself, no. I mean, we saw—you saw last year very strong hiring, and inflation coming down quickly. We now have a better sense that a big part of that was supply-side healing, particularly with growth in the labor force. So in and of itself, strong job growth is not a reason, you know, for us to be concerned about inflation.

Q: Hi, Chair Powell. Neil Irwin with Axios.

How do you assess the state of financial conditions right now? And particularly—in particular do you view the kind of easing in financial conditions since the fall as consistent and compatible with what you’re trying to achieve on the inflation mandate?

MR. POWELL: So we think—there are many different financial conditions indicators. And you can kind of, you know, see different answers to that question. But ultimately, we do think that financial conditions are weighing on economic activity. And we think you see that. And a great place to see it as in the labor market where you’ve seen demand cooling off a little bit from the extremely high levels. And there I would point to job openings, quits, surveys, the hiring rate. Things like that are really demand. There are also supply-side things happening, but I think those are demand-side things happening. You know, we saw—that’s been a question for a while. We did see progress on inflation last year, significant progress, despite, you know, financial conditions sometimes being tight or sometimes looser.

Q: Michael McKee with Bloomberg Radio and Television.

Can you give us more color on how the committee is thinking about inflation dynamics now? What we’ve seen at the beginning of the year, are they more one-off increases that will fade or is there more of a secular turn, with goods prices rising again and service prices staying sticky? And also, housing prices have been sort of the Godot of this cycle, in that you keep expecting them to go down and they don’t. How does the committee see this playing out forward, since you’ve raised your inflation forecasts?

MR. POWELL: So I see the committee looking at the two months of data and asking the same question you’re asking. And saying, we’re just going to have to see what the data show. As I mentioned, you can look at January, which is very high reading, and you can—and I think many people did see the possibility of seasonal adjustment problems there. But, again, you don’t want to—you got to be careful about dismissing the parts of the data that you don’t like. So, yeah. Then February wasn’t as high, but it was higher.

So the question is, what are we going to see? You know, we tend to see a little bit stronger—this is in the data—a little bit stronger inflation in the first half of the year, a little bit less strong later in the year. We’re going to—we’re going to let the data show. I don’t think we really know whether this is a bump on the road or something more. We’ll have to find out. In the meantime, the economy is strong, the labor market is strong, inflation has come way down, and that gives us the ability to approach this question carefully, and you know, feel more confident that inflation is moving down sustainably to 2% when we take that step to begin dialing back our restrictive policy.

Q: Well, you’ve talked about the desire to have confidence that inflation is continually moving down. Has the recent numbers we’ve gotten for inflation data dented that confidence at all?

MR. POWELL: It certainly hasn’t improved our confidence. It doesn’t raise anyone’s confident—confidence.

But I would say that the story is really essentially the same, and that is of inflation coming down gradually toward 2% on a sometimes bumpy path, as I mentioned. I think that’s what you still see. We’ve got nine months of two-and-a-half percent inflation now, and we’ve had two months of kind of bumpy inflation. We were saying that we’ll—it’s going to be a bumpy ride. We’ve consistently said that. Now here are some bumps, and the question is, are there more than bumps? And we just don’t—we can’t know that. That’s why we are approaching this question carefully.

It is very important for everyone that we serve that we do get inflation sustainably down. And I think the historical record—you know, it’s—every situation is different, but the historical record is that you need to approach that question carefully, and try to get it right the first time, and not have to come back and raise rates again, perhaps, if you—if you cut inappropriately, prematurely.

Q: Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Edward Lawrence with Fox Business.

I wanted to ask you. You received a letter from—while the Federal Reserve is an independent body, understanding Congress has oversight over that—received a letter from Senators Elizabeth Warren and Sheldon Whitehouse that said—calling on you to lower interest rates, to cut interest rates, because it says, quote, the potential that it may remain too high for too long has halted advances in deploying renewable energy technologies, and delayed significant climate and economic benefits from these projects. So has higher interest rates caused that?

MR. POWELL: Have they—well, first of all, I respect—you know, we—in our system of government, it is Congress that has oversight responsibility over the Fed. We place a tremendous amount of importance on our engagements with Congress, and always treat them with great respect.

In this case, I would say those are—you know, our mandate—you know, our mandate is for maximum employment and price stability, and the other things that we do. And that’s what we’re trying to accomplish. We’re trying to do that in a way that sustains the strong growth we’re seeing, the strong labor market we’re seeing, but allows us to make further progress with inflation. That’s how we can best serve the public, and leave the other issues—in which many cases, are incredibly important, such as those you mentioned—leave those to the people who have responsibility for those.

Q: There was another letter from two dozen lawmakers saying that the higher rates are squeezing the working people. How do these letters affect what you guys are doing, policy-wise?

MR. POWELL: We receive these respect—read these letters with respect. And we write careful responses and address concerns. We listen, again, because we’re talking to the people who, in our system of government, have oversight over our activity. So that’s—but at the—at the end of the day, we take that on board, but we have to make our judgments. And we have to stick to our knitting, which is maximum employment, price stability, supervise and regulate the banks, work on the payment system, the things that we do.

Q: Thank you. Claire Jones, Financial Times. Thanks a lot for the opportunity to ask a question.

As chair of the FOMC, would you want to see unanimity on the committee—or something close to it, meaning no more than one dissent—before you begin cutting rates? Thank you.

MR. POWELL: We’re a very consensus-oriented organization. And we do try to achieve consensus, and ideally, unanimity. People do dissent. It’s something that happens. Life goes on. And it’s not a problem. We’ve always had dissents, but—and so I—you know, and you respect thoughtful dissents very much. It’s like, you may not agree with some arguments, but you really want to understand them. So you may read a book that takes a position that you—that you have long opposed just to understand that book. So I treat dissents with real respect, as well.

Q: Simon Rabinovitch with The Economist.

Can you hear me?

MR. POWELL: Yes.

Q: OK. Great.

Obviously, inflation is some ways away from target. Unemployment, though, if you look at the projection for the full year, 4.0 percent, in February we were already at 3.9 percent, so quite close to the median projection. Are you concerned at all that, notwithstanding the very strong jobs growth, that, in fact, there might be some cracks appearing in the employment market? You talked about a significant deterioration in the labor market being a condition for easing rates. What would constitute that, in your books? Thank you.

MR. POWELL: So we, of course, monitor the—it’s one of our two goal variables—we all monitor the labor market very, very carefully. And I don’t see those cracks today. And we—you know, we follow all the possible stories that are out there about there being cracks. But the overall picture really is strong labor market, the extreme imbalances that we saw in the early parts of the pandemic recovery have mostly been resolved. You’re seeing high job growth. You’re seeing big increases in supply. You’re seeing strong wage growth, but wage growth is gradually moderating down to more sustainable levels.

In many, many respects, things are returning more to their state in 2019, which we can think of as “normal” for this purpose. That’s job openings and quits. And surveys of workers and businesses are always interesting on this. You know, how tight is the—how easy is it to find a job? How hard is—how easy is it to find a worker? Those have both—those surveys have both come down. So the labor market’s in—it’s in good shape. You know, you do see things like the low—the low hiring rate. And people have made the argument that if layoffs were to increase, that would—that would mean that the net would be fairly quick increases in unemployment. So that’s something we’re watching. But we’re not seeing it.

Of course, initial claims are very, very low. And if anything, have tracked down a little bit. So watching it carefully. Don’t see it. And when I say something—I used the term “unexpected weakening” of the labor market. So, you know, we do expect the unemployment rate to—you know, the forecast is that it would move up, I think, closer to what we see as the longer-run sustainable level. That’s just—that’s just people’s forecast, individual forecasts. But we’re talking about something that’s unexpected. That’s where I’ll leave it though.

Q: Steve Matthews with Bloomberg.

You mentioned at the beginning of the press conference that the committee thought it might be appropriate to slow the pace of asset runoff fairly soon. I’m wondering, when you say “fairly soon,” does that mean that the committee would meet about this again in May, and a decision could be reached that soon? And I was wondering if you could also just describe the scope of what the committee is discussing here. You’re at $95 billion of caps right now. Would that be cut about in half, or something in that nature? Thank you.

MR. POWELL: So that is what we’re discussing, essentially, is—and we’re not discussing all the other—many other balance sheet issues. We will discuss those in the in due course. But what we’re really looking at is slowing the pace of runoff. There isn’t much runoff among MBS right now, but there is in Treasurys. And we’re talking about going to a lower pace. I don’t want to give you a specific number because we haven’t made a—haven’t had an agreement or a decision. But that’s the idea. And that’s what we’re looking at.

And in terms of the timing, I said “fairly soon.” I wouldn’t want to try to be more specific than that. But you get the idea. The idea is—and this is in our—in our longer-run plans, that we may actually be able to get to a lower level, because we would avoid the kind of frictions that can happen. Liquidity is not evenly distributed in the system. And there can be times when in the aggregate reserves are ample or even abundant, but not in every part. And those parts where they’re not ample there can be stress. And that can cause you to prematurely stop the process to avoid the stress. And then it would be very hard to restart, we think. So something like that happened in ’19, perhaps.

So that’s what we’re doing. We’re looking at what would be a good time and what will be a good structure. And, you know, “fairly soon” is words that we use to mean fairly soon.

Q: And will there be a discussion about returning to an all-Treasurys balance sheet at some point?

MR. POWELL: So that—our longer-run goal is to return to a balance sheet that is mostly Treasurys. I do expect that once we’re through this, we’ll come back to the other issues about the composition and the maturity and revisit those issues. But it’s, you know, not urgent right now. We want to get—want to get this decision made first. And then we can, when the time is right, come back to the other issues.

Q: Hi. Victoria Guida with Politico.

Also on the balance sheet, you know, can you talk a little bit about how the outlook for the banking sector might impact your balance sheet plans? Do you worry that as deposits start to shrink that we could see more turbulence?

MR. POWELL: You know, we’ll be watching carefully. But one of the reasons we’re slowing down—we will soon enough—fairly soon, I should say, slow down—is that we want to avoid any kind of that—of turbulence.

I wasn’t thinking particularly about banking sector turbulence but we—and we had some indicators the last time.

This is our second time in doing this and I think we’re going to be paying a lot of attention to the things that started to happen and that foreshadowed what eventually happened at the end of that tightening cycle where we wound up in a short reserves situation, and we don’t want to do that again.

And I think now we have a better sense of what are the indicators. It isn’t—it wasn’t so much in the banking system as it was around, for example, where federal funds is trading relative to the administered rates and where secured rates are relative to the administered rates—those sorts of things. We will always be watching the banking system for similar signs, though.

Q: Well, is it also because you’re not sure exactly how the reserve supply will react once the overnight reverse repo facility, you know, drops near or at zero?

MR. POWELL: Well, I think we, broadly, think that once the overnight repo stabilizes either at zero or close to zero that as the balance sheet shrinks we should expect that reserves will decline pretty close to dollar for dollar with that. That’s what we think.

Q: Hi, Chair Powell. Jean Yung with MNI Market News.

I wanted to ask also about the balance sheet. Will you – you said that starting the taper sooner could get you to a smaller balance sheet size. Does that mean you don’t have to make a decision on when to end QT at this point and will you be setting up the process for deciding that sooner or will you wait until more close to the end?

MR. POWELL: So it’s sort of ironic that by going slower you can get farther but that’s the idea. The idea is that with a smoother transition you won’t—you’ll run much less risk of kind of liquidity problems which can grow into shocks and which can cause you to stop the process prematurely.

So that’s where it—in terms of how it ends we’re going to be monitoring carefully money market conditions and asking ourselves whether they—what they’re telling us about reserves. Are they—right now we would characterize them as abundant and what we’re aiming for is ample and, you know, which is a little bit less than abundant.

So there isn’t a—you know, there’s not a dollar amount or a percent of GDP or anything like that where we think we have a really pretty clear understanding of that. We’re going to be looking at what these—you know, what’s happening in money markets in particular. There are a bunch of different indicators including the ones I mentioned to tell us when we’re getting close.

Then, though, you reach a point ultimately where you stop allowing the balance sheet to run off and you—but then from that point there’s another period in which non-reserve liabilities grow organically like currency and that also shrinks the reserves at a very slow pace.

So you have, you know, a slower pace of runoff, which we’ll have fairly soon. Then you have another time where you effectively hold the balance sheet constant and allow non-reserve liabilities to expand, and then that ultimately brings you ideally in for—you know, brings it into a nice easy landing at a level that is above—you know, above what we think the lowest possible ample number would be.

We’re not trying for that. We want to have a cushion, a buffer, because we know that demand for reserves can be very volatile and we don’t want to, again, find ourselves in a situation where there aren’t reserves and we have to turn around and, you know, buy assets and put reserves back in the banking system the way we did in 2019-20.

Q: Hi. Nancy Marshall-Genzer with Marketplace.

Chair Powell, you said you’re waiting to become more confident that inflation is getting to your 2% goal before you cut rates. Can you just sum up more specifically what data you’re looking at that would give you that confidence?

MR. POWELL: Sure. So, most importantly, we’re looking at the incoming inflation data and the contents of it and what they’re telling us. So that’ll be—and also the various components. So obviously that’s what we want. We want more confidence that inflation is coming down sustainably toward 2%.

And, I mean, of course, we’ll also be looking at all the other things that are happening in the economy. We’ll look at the totality of the data, including everything, essentially, as we make that assessment. But the most important thing will be the inflation data coming in.

Q: Well, are there things that you would give more weight to, like wages?

MR. POWELL: Wages is one thing. We don’t—our target is not wages. It’s really inflation. But we would look to the fact that wages are still coming in very strong, but they’ve been—wage increases—that is to say, wage increases have been quite strong, but they’re gradually coming down to levels that are more sustainable over time. And that’s what we want.

We don’t think—the inflation was not originally caused, we think—I don’t think—by—mostly by wages. That wasn’t really the story. But we do think that to get inflation back down to 2% sustainably, we’d like to see, you know, continuing gradual movement of wage increases at still high levels, but back down to levels that are more sustainable over time.

Q: Thank you. Greg Robb from MarketWatch.

Chair Powell, could you say at this meeting whether there were more officials who want to be careful and go slower about rates than were at the last meeting? Was there that sense of maybe it’s smart to wait? Thanks.

MR. POWELL: I guess I’d put it this way. The—if you look at the incoming inflation data that we’ve had for January and February, I think, very broadly, that suggests that we were right to wait until we’re more confident. So I think—you know, I didn’t hear anyone dismissing it as not information that we should look at or anything like that. So I think, generally speaking, it does go in the direction of saying yes, it’s appropriate for us to be careful as we approach this question.

Q: Thanks, Chair Powell. Brendan Pedersen with Punchbowl News. I wanted to ask you about central-bank digital-currency stuff. We’ve been hearing a lot from Republicans in Congress about what the Fed is or isn’t doing in digital dollar. But I know you have said to Congress that you are going to wait for approval before the Fed does anything, launches anything. But folks like House Majority Whip Tom Emmer have said that the Fed is either actively researching or hiring personnel to study the implications of the CBDC. Can you give us any clarity on what the Fed is doing right now on a digital dollar?

MR. POWELL: Sure. So I think we’ve been pretty transparent on this, but I will — I’ll try harder.

So we are not getting ready to—we haven’t proposed and we haven’t come to a conclusion that we should propose, or anything like that, that Congress consider legislation to authorize a digital dollar. And it would take legislation by Congress, signed by the president, to give us the ability to do what we think of as a CBDC, which is really a retail CBDC with the public.So we’re just a long, long way from that.

What we are doing, and I think what every major central bank is doing, is we’re trying to stay in the frontiers of what’s going on in digital finance. And it has many, many different areas. You know, it has applications in wholesale finance, in the payment system. And so we need—to serve the public, we need—these issues have become very front burner in the last five or six years—we need to be knowledgeable about all that.

So we actually do have people trying to understand things that are—but it’s wrong to say that we’re working on a CBDC and that we’ve secretly got a lab here where we’ve got one and we’re just going to spring it on Congress at the right moment. We don’t. I haven’t at all, in my own mind, made a decision that I think this is something the U.S. should be doing. You know, I just think it’s something we need to be—we need to understand. And we do have people who are keeping with that as part of the broader payments landscape. That’s how I would characterize it.

Q: Thank you. It’s Mark Hamrick with Bankrate.

Mr. Chairman, April 27th will mark the 13th anniversary since a Fed chairman began holding regular news conferences. How important has that higher transparency been in your view, both for the proper functioning of the central bank and also in accomplishing your mission? And is there more that you and your colleagues can do on the transparency front, and what might that look like?

MR. POWELL: I generally think—I mean, this movement actually started, you know, thirty years ago—thirty years ago, when some academics posited that a more transparent central bank, if the public understands your reaction function, the markets will do your work for you; they’ll react to the data, and so it all happens that way. And so there’s been a march toward greater and greater transparency, and that—certainly, Chairman Bernanke advanced that. So — Chairman Greenspan did. Chair Yellen did.

And I—you know, so we went from four press conferences a year to eight, so now every meeting, really, is live now. I think that’s a good innovation. I wouldn’t—I wouldn’t want to turn it back.

We also have done a bunch of other things. You know, we have an annual supervision report, financial stability report. I mean, there’s a long list of things that we’ve done. I think you—I mean, nothing comes to mind as really desperately in need of doing at this moment. We’re very transparent. We have no shortage of FOMC participants speaking to the public through the media. And so that channel is full, I would say.

So I think — I think it’s generally broadly helped and made things better, but not every day and in every way.

Q: Well, to follow up, has there ever been a day where you wanted to put that genie back in the bottle somewhat?

MR. POWELL: Of course not. (Laughter.)

Q: Thank you, Chair Powell. Jennifer Schonberger with Yahoo Finance.

Not to harp too much more on confidence and inflation, but you did say earlier in this press conference that the recent inflation data hasn’t raised anyone’s confidence. But when you testified before the Senate a couple weeks ago, you told lawmakers that you are, quote, “not far” from receiving the confidence needed on inflation to begin cutting rates. So are you still of that belief or not? What are we to take by those words, “not far?”

MR. POWELL: So let me say my main message at that—in those two days of hearings was really that the committee needs to see more evidence to build our confidence that inflation is moving down sustainably toward our 2% goal, and we don’t expect that it will be appropriate to begin to reduce rates until we’re more confident that that is the case—that that is the case. I said that any number of times, so those were kind of the main part of the message. We repeated that today in our statement.

I also—to the language I mentioned, I really pointed out that we had made significant progress over the past year, and what we’re looking for now is confirmation that that progress will continue. We had a series of inflation readings over the second half of last year that were really much lower. We didn’t overreact, as I mentioned. But that’s what I had in mind.

Q: But given that you said that PCE for February, 2.8 percent, the estimate, and that we have been seeing PCE—core PCE coming down by a tenth of a percent every month, I mean, wouldn’t you be at about 2.4 percent this summer—June/July—to a point where you could cut, then?

MR. POWELL: Well, you know, we’ll just have to see how the data—the data come in. We would, of course, love to get great inflation data. We got really good inflation data on the second—in the second part of last year. Again, we didn’t overreact to it; we said we needed to see more. And we said it would be bumpy, and now we have January and February, which I’ve talked about a couple of times. So, you know, we’re looking for more good data, and we would certainly welcome it.