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REPEAT: MNI: 5 Things: New Fed Nominees Back FOMC Positions

Repeats Story Initially Transmitted at 16:51 GMT May 15/12:51 EST May 15
By Jean Yung
     WASHINGTON (MNI) - Richard Clarida and Michelle Bowman, President Donald
Trump's latest nominees for the Federal Reserve Board, testified in front of the
Senate Banking Committee on Tuesday, answering questions on the economy,
monetary policy and financial regulation. In a short hearing that ran just over
an hour, neither made waves with their comments, which largely backed existing
FOMC positions. 
     Clarida is an economist and former adviser at Pimco and if confirmed would
serve as Chair Jay Powell's No. 2. Bowman is the Kansas state banking
commissioner and former executive at her family-owned Farmers and Drovers Bank. 
     Clarida and Bowman are not expected to face opposition from the Banking
Committee, but no date has been set for a full Senate vote. They would join
other Trump picks Powell and Randal Quarles as well as Lael Brainard, an Obama
nominee. Two other slots are empty, with Trump nominee Marvin Goodfriend's vote
currently held up in the Senate. 
     The following are key highlights from their comments Tuesday: 
     - Clarida said he "absolutely" supports the Fed's ongoing normalization of
interest rates. He said neither Trump nor he discussed their individual views on
the level of appropriate interest rates during his nomination interview. 
     - Clarida backed Powell's stance that the Fed's normalized balance sheet
would be "a lot smaller" and an estimate in the range of $2.4 trillion to $2.9
trillion, compared to its crisis-level size of $4.5 trillion, "makes sense."
Growing demand for currency necessitates a bigger balance sheet than before the
financial crisis, but the Fed should divest all of its holdings in
mortgage-backed securities, Clarida said. 
     - Asked whether sluggish wage growth signaled further slack in the labor
market, Clarida said that the Fed should focus on achieving a jobless rate that
fits a healthy economy. Wage growth is a function of a number of features of the
economy, including productivity growth and technological changes, he said.  
     - Stock market volatility in and of itself shouldn't determine how the Fed
makes its rate-setting decisions, Clarida said. 
     - Clarida said he supports efforts to tailor financial regulation but that
policies should "preserve the far greater resiliency and stability of the
financial system" as a result of post-crisis reforms. Bowman said some rules put
smaller banks at a disadvantage. 
--MNI Washington Bureau; +1 202-371-2121; email: jean.yung@marketnews.com

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