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REPEAT: MNI INSIGHT: New FOMC Not Precommitted To Hawkish Path

Repeats Story Initially Transmitted at 14:00 GMT Feb 2/09:00 EST Feb 2
--Powell, Who Becomes Fed Chair Monday, Augers Continuity
--Newcomers Quarles, Goodfriend, Barkin May Not Be As Hawkish As Analysts Expect
By Jean Yung
     WASHINGTON (MNI) - A perceived hawkish tilt in new leadership at the
Federal Reserve Board and this year's rotation of regional Fed bank presidents
argue for a shift to a more aggressive pace of rate hikes, but that sentiment
may be overstated, MNI understands. 
     There may indeed be such a shift underway as the economy continues to gain
speed, but the changing of the guard alone is not the grounds for the FOMC's
change of approach, sources close to policymakers told MNI. 
     A global growth spurt, U.S. tax cuts and easy financial conditions skew
near-term risks to the upside. Inflation, still below the Fed's 2% target, is
expected to rise this year as the labor market tightens further. A hike in March
seems locked in at this point, moving the focus to whether the Fed might see a
need for more than the three increases it currently anticipates for 2018. 
     --POWELL'S CONTINUITY MESSAGE
     In the rearview is Janet Yellen and the era of cautious recovery over which
she presided, as Fed officials held rates lower for longer than many had
anticipated on account of persistent low inflation and subdued growth. Fed Gov.
Jay Powell will be sworn in as chairman Monday to head a new Board staffed by
fellow Trump appointees Randy Quarles and Marvin Goodfriend, provided the Senate
confirms Goodfriend. A vice chair pick will also come soon, according to Trump
adviser Gary Cohn, potentially followed by Trump's choices for three other empty
slots. 
     Powell has signaled during his confirmation process that he intends to
continue the Fed's current approach of gradual tightening by slowly raising
rates and allowing assets to run off the balance sheet as they mature. Centrists
on the Federal Open Market Committee have penciled in a baseline of three hikes
this year, and there is nothing to suggest Powell is outside of that camp. 
     His views will certainly evolve and react to changing conditions, but to
the extent the Fed is projecting current conditions prevailing over the medium
term, there may be little difference in the general thrust of policy under a
Powell Fed. 
     --GOODFRIEND REPRESENTS MAINSTREAM
     Some have noted Powell's lack of graduate-level economics credentials, and
that Goodfriend's selection was meant to add some academic heft to the Fed
Board. 
     A well respected economist with mainstream views who spent many years at
the Richmond Fed, Goodfriend could have significant intellectual influence at
the Board. He is known as a gutsy thinker willing to take on his own
organization and would not hesitate to make his position known -- perhaps even
going as far as breaking with consensus to cast a dissent, a rare move among Fed
governors. 
     Last March, when inflation was verging on 2%, he said in an interview with
Bloomberg Television that the Fed was already "behind the curve" and he hoped
that the FOMC would move preemptively to stabilize inflation. There was "enough
pressure in the pipeline" for the Fed to put together a "small campaign" of
hikes over 2017 to take the fed fund rate above 2%, equivalent to six rate
increases in a year. 
     Inflation has since retreated to 1.5% for reasons that have stumped
officials, yet the Fed, doing as Goodfriend advised, has pressed on with
tightening. 
     It's also worth noting that the Carnegie Mellon University professor has
been an outspoken advocate for negative interest rates during downturns, a
policy that even longtime doves on the FOMC have not embraced. If the U.S.
economy experiences a serious reversal, he would likely be a voice for
considering a policy response that so far has been met with limited enthusiasm. 
     --DIFFERENT FOCUS
     Two other newcomers to the voting bloc on the FOMC this year may be more
inclined to fall in line with the consensus view. 
     Quarles, named the Fed's first vice chair of supervision late last year, is
likely to keep his focus on matters of bank regulation. Given his longstanding
professional relationship with Powell going back to their time at Carlyle Group,
as well as the traditional deference by governors to the chair, he may not opine
too frequently on monetary policy, preferring to voice differing views
internally. Daniel Tarullo, his predecessor in fact if not in title, was
reluctant to wade into policy debates. He spoke on rare occasions and did not
stray from the consensus when he did.
     Among this year's rotation of Fed bank presidents, only one has yet to give
any insight into his thinking on monetary policy: freshly appointed Richmond Fed
President Tom Barkin. The regional Fed bank has for years had presidents with
hawkish views on monetary policy. Jeffrey Lacker, who stepped down in April,
repeatedly dissented in favor of higher rates. 
     However, the appointment of Barkin, a McKinsey executive, signals the Fed
bank preferred strong management capabilities over strong monetary policy views.
The Richmond Fed is responsible for the IT infrastructure of the Fed system with
hundreds of employees working in that capacity. Over time Barkin will likely
develop his own policy position, but he may follow the well-worn path of other
FOMC newcomers and wait to gain a year or two of policymaking experience before
staking out public views. 
     --ECONOMY IN DRIVERS SEAT
     Hence the changing composition of the FOMC does not suggest a radical
departure from the policy stance of recent years. An economy that's found its
legs won't force the central bank to raise more rapidly than anticipated -- at
least as long as inflation data cooperate.
--MNI Washington Bureau; +1 202-371-2121; email: jean.yung@marketnews.com

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