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To: Lazarus_Long who wrote (52384)6/13/2004 10:47:51 AM
From: AugustWest  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 57110
 
(REUTERS) Greenspan to reassure lawmakers on growth,inflation

By Tim Ahmann
WASHINGTON, June 13 (Reuters) - Federal Reserve Chairman
Alan Greenspan will display his inflation-fighting credentials
on Capitol Hill this week even as he seeks to assure lawmakers
the central bank wants a vigorous expansion, analysts say.
Greenspan goes before the Senate Banking Committee on
Tuesday as it considers the 78-year-old central banker's
nomination for a fifth, and final, term at the Fed's helm.
The panel is expected to vote on the nomination within days
of the hearing, paving the way for full Senate approval before
Greenspan's current term expires on June 20.
As always, financial markets will examine the Fed chief's
comments closely for any hints on the interest-rate outlook. A
quickening of inflation has investors on alert for signals on
how fast and how far rates will rise.
Fed officials seemed keen last week to ease any worries the
central bank was behind the inflation curve.
Greenspan said early in the week that while the Fed should
be able to be "measured" in raising borrowing costs, it will do
what it must to keep inflation from spinning out of control.
He is likely to deliver a similar message on Tuesday.
The Fed is expected to push up short-term interest rates
from their current 1958 low of 1 percent after a meeting on
June 29-30. It would be the first rate hike in four years and
analysts expect it will be the first of many.
"He'll probably get pressed on inflation and, I think, how
aggressively they'll tighten up," said former Fed governor
Susan Phillips. She noted that many investors wonder if they
should brace for a repeat of 1994 when rates shot up from 3
percent to 6 percent during the year.

MESSAGE CLEAR
Fed officials on Friday tackled the 1994 question. Atlanta
Fed President Jack Guynn said he did not see a repeat of those
rapid rises and Sandra Pianalto, head of the Cleveland Fed,
ticked off differences between then and now.
But the word on almost every Fed official's lips last week
was credibility -- essential for keeping inflation expectations
from taking hold.
"The market is not going to respond favorably and you're
not going to help the situation if the market comes to believe
that we are moving too slowly and we're letting the situation
get out of control," Poole told Reuters.
Wall Street and Main Street must have faith in the Fed's
ability to keep prices stable to prevent a self-reinforcing
spiral where expectations for higher costs lead to rising wage
demands and business price rises.
"When you talk about Greenspan's legacy, you've got to say
he certainly has great credibility in inflation fighting. I
don't think at this stage of his career he wants to jeopardize
that," said Greg Valliere of Schwab Soundview Capital Markets.
"I think he'll still sound agnostic on whether we are about
to see a significant rise in inflation, but I think he has to
sound a little more vigilant in terms of the Fed's response if
we do get some more signs of inflation."
Analysts said Greenspan would probably leaven his rate-hike
talk with optimistic words on the economy.
"It's a balancing act as the Fed always faces. You want to
contain inflation but you do not want to knock this expansion
off the tracks," said Investors' Security Trust Co. Chairman
David Jones, a veteran Fed watcher.
Nomination hearings are rarely the venue for detailed
economic exposition. If history is a guide, Greenspan's opening
remarks will likely be brief.
His nomination is expected to be smooth sailing. "If the
economy were really not showing signs of improvement, it might
be possible that there could be a little bit of political
posturing," said Phillips, who expects Greenspan will be
received warmly.
((Reporting by Tim Ahmann; Reuters Messaging:
tim.ahmann.reuters.com@reuters.net; e-mail:
tim.ahmann@reuters.com; 1 202 898-8370))
REUTERS
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