In more ways than one, Fed's Powell showed his strategy this week
The Semiannual Monetary Policy Report to the Congress hearing in Washington · Reuters

By Howard Schneider

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - With a war in Europe underway, a pandemic still locking down parts of the global economy and financial markets having turned sharply volatile, the U.S. economic outlook remains unpredictable.

But Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell this week offered his most detailed account yet of the strategy for confronting a generational inflation shock while avoiding any meaningful rise in unemployment.

There is plenty that could go wrong, either in the direction of an even larger inflation problem or an economy that starts to buckle unexpectedly.

The Powell Fed is trying to cover both possibilities.

Here's how:

BEND DON'T BREAK

Powell, with little ambiguity, said in a news conference on Wednesday that while the Fed would not hesitate to raise interest rates as high as needed to curb inflation, policymakers weren't ready to deliver a shock treatment, such as a three-quarter point rate hike.

His comments came after the Fed announced it would raise its benchmark overnight interest rate by half a percentage point and start next month to reduce its balance sheet.

Some analysts felt Powell came off as unintentionally "dovish" in doing so, and investors, after wavering for a bit, remain convinced the Fed will have to move faster.

But there's another possibility.

"I don't think it was a slip of the tongue," said former Fed monetary policy chief Bill English, currently a professor at the Yale School of Management. "They don't want to be a source of uncertainty, so move steadily. Seventy-five (basis points) might have shaken things up."

READ MY LIPS

Powell was unusually explicit in flagging the likelihood of half-point rate increases at the next two Fed meetings.

Fed forward guidance is more traditionally done with modifiers like "gradual" that investors translate into an expected pace of rate hikes.

Powell seems ready instead to simply say what's likely to happen. His Wednesday press conference was the third recent instance when he has effectively pinned down future meeting outcomes. While decisions are not final until policymakers vote, Powell may be reasserting his voice as chair at a time when he wants the message to stay clear and simple, and not be muddied by public debate among his colleagues.

"It is in some sense old school monetary policy," said former top Fed staffer Vincent Reinhart, chief economist at Dreyfus and Mellon. What Powell is saying is, "In an environment of uncertainty we are not sure where we are going to wind up. We do know which direction we should head, and the more we do it the closer we will be to where we should be and I will let you know then."