Powell says "I do think we'll be moving away from" the dual mandate goals "probably for the balance of this year. Or at least not making any progress, and then we'll resume that progress as we can."
- He repeats that "the tariffs are larger than than forecasters had expected, certainly larger than we expected, even in our upside case."
- Powell asked on whether the Fed would intervene if the stock market falls sharply, he says "I'm going to say 'no', with an explanation... what I think is going on in markets is markets are processing what's going on. And you know, it's really the policies, particularly the trade policy. And really the question is, where is that going to come in? Where's that going to land? And we don't know that yet, and until we know that, you can't really make informed assessments, that would still be highly uncertain. Once you know what the policies are, it'll still be highly uncertain what the economic effects will be. So markets are struggling with a lot of uncertainty, and that means volatility. But having said that, markets are functioning conditional on being in such a challenging situation, Markets are doing what they're supposed to do. They're they're orderly and they're functioning, just about as you would expect them to function."
- Asked about the rise in Tsy yields, Powell doesn't sound concerned: "I think it's very hard to know [why] In real time. I've had a lot of experience with significant moves, for example, in the bond market, where there's a narrative that people land on, and then two months later, you look back and go, that was completely wrong. So I think it's very premature to say exactly what's going on. Clearly, there's some delevering going on among hedge funds in levered trades and things like that. It's also, again, it's the markets processing historically unique developments with great uncertainty and I think you'll see you'll probably see continued volatility, but I wouldn't I don't I wouldn't try to be definitive about exactly what's causing that - I would just say, markets are orderly and they're functioning kind of as you would expect them to in this time of high uncertainty."
- Powell asked about March's decision to taper balance sheet runoff, says "we're not particularly close to the point where we would stop" QT.