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Federal Reserve chief Jay Powell plays down growth worries after jobs report disappoints


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Federal Reserve chair Jay Powell played down concerns over US growth after U-turns by Donald Trumpโ€™s administration, disappointing jobs numbers and a tumultuous week in financial markets.

Powell on Friday said the worldโ€™s largest economy remained โ€œin good shapeโ€ despite the elevated โ€œuncertaintyโ€, after the president launched an aggressive agenda of tariffs and spending cuts.

โ€œWe are focused on separating the signal from the noise as the outlook evolves,โ€ Powell said, adding the Fed was in no โ€œhurryโ€ to cut interest rates and was โ€œwell positioned to wait for greater clarityโ€.

Powellโ€™s comments came as the blue-chip S&P 500 ended the week down 3.1 per cent, its worst run since early September. US stocks have pulled back sharply in recent weeks after gloomy economic reports prompted worries Trumpโ€™s tariffs will slow growth.

Corporate executives warned the chaotic pivots in trade policy, including a major reversal this week on the administrationโ€™s plans to tariff goods from Canada and Mexico, had made it difficult to run their businesses, and could stymie fresh investments into the US.

The US is โ€œat a crossroads, economicallyโ€, said Charles Lemonides, chief investment officer at ValueWorks, a New York-based hedge fund. โ€œWe donโ€™t know where policy is going and it creates huge turmoil.โ€

The Bureau of Labor Statistics on Friday released data showing the US created 151,000 jobs in February, falling short of the 160,000 forecast by economists polled by Reuters.

The unemployment rate was 4.1 per cent last month, compared with expectations it would hold steady at 4 per cent.

โ€œInvestor sentiment was euphoric after the election but thereโ€™s been a whole lot of cold water thrown on that euphoria over the past month,โ€ said Jim Tierney, head of the concentrated US growth fund at AllianceBernstein.

โ€œPowell is saying everything is fine, but thatโ€™s not what consumer sentiment is saying and itโ€™s not where weโ€™ve heard business sentiment to be, either,โ€ he added.

The Fed chair had recently signalled the central bank would keep its main interest rate at its current range of between 4.25 per cent and 4.5 per cent as it assessed the impact of Trumpโ€™s policies.

But markets are increasingly betting the Fed will be forced to cut rates more aggressively this year than thought, dragging Treasury yields lower and weighing on the dollar.

The US dollar index, which tracks the greenbackโ€™s strength against six other currencies, has lost 4.3 per cent this year.

Asked what would prompt the Fed to respond to tariffs imposed on US imports, Powell said on Friday: โ€œWhat would really matter is whatโ€™s happening with longer-term inflation expectations and how persistent are the inflationary effects.โ€

Some economists have warned Trumpโ€™s spending cuts and the slashing of the federal workforce through the so-called โ€œDepartment of Government Efficiencyโ€, led by billionaire Elon Musk, could also be a drag on the economy.

Earlier in the week, Trump rolled back some of the tariffs he imposed on Canada and Mexico in an attempt to soothe markets. On Friday, he acknowledged some economic pain might come from his policies and their sometimes chaotic rollout.

โ€œThere could be some disturbance, a little bit of disturbance,โ€ the president said, repeating a line from his speech to Congress on Tuesday night. โ€œThere will always be changes and adjustments.โ€



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