What to Expect from Fed Chair Powell's Jackson Hole Speech
Werte in diesem Artikel
Friday, August 22, 2025A half hour after the opening bell for the final trading day of the week, Fed Chair Jerome Powell will take the stage at the Jackson Hole Economic Symposium this morning, in one of his most anticipated Jackson Hole speeches in years. Investors will be listening closely to hear if the deliberate and methodical Powell will be leaning toward a 25-basis-point (bps) interest rate cut.The Fed has kept rates steady year-to-date at 4.25-4.50%. In historical terms, we’re neither high nor low — Powell’s main objective has been the same as the Fed’s dual mandate has always dictated: full employment and controlled inflation. Powell has set a 2% inflation rate as his objective during his tenure (which almost certainly ends by the conclusion of his current term next May, at the latest).In recent months, we’ve seen a slow emergence of Fed objectives moving in opposite directions: the labor market has undeniably cooled off while tariff initiatives have begun to send inflation somewhat higher. Thus, whether the Fed — and Powell specifically — would be more inclined to bring about a 25 bps rate cut at its September meeting (the 16th and 17th) or not is what the interpretation of today’s speech pivots on.It’s not that Powell’s initiatives have always been spot-on, either. At the Jackson Hole summit four years ago, he rather infamously declared inflation “transitory” (read: temporary) even as the stickiness of supply chain constriction in the wake of the Covid pandemic was already becoming evident. At the time, Powell was concerned with the economic well-being of those on the lower end of the labor market; he was interested in having them see some groundswell in income, as others up the chain of the economy already had. But it turned out to be a move that helped balloon the inflation rate up to +9.1% in June 2022 — 40-year highs.Much of the Fed’s decision on interest rate policy, which saw two dissents at the July meeting (for a 25 bps cut, as the final decision was to keep rates steady) for the first time in decades, will rest on economic data. Here, the timing could certainly have been better regarding today’s speech: the Fed’s preferred economic report is Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE), which doesn’t report for July until a week from today.In the June report on PCE, headline +2.6% was up 40 basis points in two months. While the level is not troubling in and of itself, it is pulling away from that +2% target; it got closest back in September of last year: +2.1%. Core PCE, stripping out volatile food and energy prices, came in at +2.8% for the second-straight month. The Fed will have the benefit of next week’s PCE report — along with another Consumer Price Index (CPI) and Inflation Rate (+2.7% the past two months) and BLS jobs numbers — before making its decision on a rate cut in September. Thus, we expect Powell to be firmly “data dependent” in his speech today, neither confirming nor denying whether a 25 bps cut is coming. Analysts will be parsing his language closely, however, to look for nuance in his outlook.Pre-market futures are up this morning after a week-long swoon. The S&P 500 looks to break a five-session losing streak. The market has taken some of the air out of tech stock valuations and reckoned with retail earnings reports and their outlooks in re tariff considerations. The Dow is +135 points at this hour, the S&P 500 is +13, the Nasdaq +27 points and the small-cap Russell 2000 +10.Questions or comments about this article and/or author? Click here>>One Big Gain, Every Trading DayTo help you take full advantage of this market, you’re invited to access every stock recommendation in all our private portfolios - for just $1.Zacks private portfolio services that closed 256 double and triple-digit winners in 2024 alone. That’s about one big gain every day the market was open. Of course, not all our picks are winners, but members have seen recent gains as high as +627% +1,340%, and +1,708%.Imagine how much you could profit with a steady stream of real-time picks from all our services that cover a number of strategies to suit a variety of investing and trading styles.See Stocks Now >>Want the latest recommendations from Zacks Investment Research? Today, you can download 7 Best Stocks for the Next 30 Days. Click to get this free report Invesco QQQ (QQQ): ETF Research Reports SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY): ETF Research Reports SPDR Dow Jones Industrial Average ETF (DIA): ETF Research ReportsThis article originally published on Zacks Investment Research (zacks.com).Zacks Investment ResearchWeiter zum vollständigen Artikel bei Zacks
Übrigens: Jackson Financial und andere US-Aktien sind bei finanzen.net ZERO sogar bis 23 Uhr handelbar (ohne Ordergebühren, zzgl. Spreads). Jetzt kostenlos Depot eröffnen und Neukunden-Bonus sichern!
Ausgewählte Hebelprodukte auf Jackson Financial
Mit Knock-outs können spekulative Anleger überproportional an Kursbewegungen partizipieren. Wählen Sie einfach den gewünschten Hebel und wir zeigen Ihnen passende Open-End Produkte auf Jackson Financial
Der Hebel muss zwischen 2 und 20 liegen
Name | Hebel | KO | Emittent |
---|
Name | Hebel | KO | Emittent |
---|
Quelle: Zacks
Nachrichten zu Jackson Financial
Analysen zu Jackson Financial
Keine Analysen gefunden.