Bonds

Yellen demurs on second Powell term, saying she’ll talk to Biden

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said the question of whether to nominate Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell for a second term is a conversation for her and President Joe Biden, declining to give her opinion in a televised interview.

“That’s a discussion I’m going to have with the president,” Yellen said Thursday on CNBC. The Fed has done a “good job,” she said, without elaborating.

Janet Yellen, then chair of the U.S. Federal Reserve, arrives to a news conference following a Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting on Sept. 20, 2017.

Bloomberg News

Powell’s four-year term as chair ends in February, and historically presidents have decided in the late summer or fall on whether to renominate a central bank chief. Former President Donald Trump denied Yellen a second term that would have begun in 2018, picking Powell instead.

Yellen said the recent drop in Treasury yields reflected the view that inflation will remain under control. She also said investors haven’t forgotten the pattern of secular stagnation — of structurally slower paces of growth and inflation — that prevailed before the pandemic.

Low yields also reflect an outlook for interest rates to remain at a “moderate” level, she said.

Articles You May Like

California Supreme Court to revisit pension reform issues
Quincy, Massachusetts, issues first blockchain-based bond deal in U.S.
Munis can’t escape macro data-led weakness
Brightline sees strong demand; unrated bonds sport 12% yield
Regional bank earnings may expose critical weaknesses, former FDIC Chair Sheila Bair warns