
The U.S. economy looks good to Jerome Powell.
The big picture: The Fed chairman laid out his rose-colored vision of the country on Tuesday at the National Association for Business Economics conference. The economy is neither too hot nor too cold, inflation is under control, productivity is increasing, the job market is booming and the Fed is not (repeat, not!) engaging in a new quantitative easing program.
What's happening: It's becoming clear to more economists and market participants that the Fed's toolkit is losing its effectiveness and monetary policy may be powerless to protect the economy if there's a recession. So Powell has deployed a central bank's most consistent weapon: communication.
What he's saying:
1. About the unprecedented level of U.S. debt:
2. About the possibility the Fed's loose monetary policy could overheat the economy:
3. About growing worry from investors and the business community:
4. About why the Fed is cutting interest rates:
5. About the Fed injecting around $300 billion of cash to buy U.S. Treasuries in the repo market and plans to continue indefinitely. Isn't that quantitative easing?
6. Fed chairs have typically worried about inflation getting too high, but Powell confirmed on Tuesday that he is instead focused on keeping inflation from getting too low.
The state of play: With consumer confidence falling, leading economic indicators turning negative, the systemically important repo market in disrepair, major European economies likely in recession, the outlook for the trade war deteriorating and stock market volatility popping, Powell is doing his best to infuse confidence into the market.