• Asks for assessment of Middle East developments and implications for the Fed committee.
    Host (Lisa/Mike)
  • Christopher Waller
    Predicts a spike in gasoline prices that will shock consumers but views it as unlikely to cause sustained inflation. The Fed focuses on core inflation as a better predictor. Expects price spike to unwind as supply chain issues resolve, making it irrelevant for rate decisions 6 months out.
  • Asks when the oil shock becomes a bigger concern, referencing the 1970s experience and Fed officials being scarred by it.
    Host (Lisa/Mike)
  • Christopher Waller
    Contrasts current situation with the 1970s, which had multiple massive, permanent oil shocks (1973, 1979). Views current event as more likely a one-off.
  • Asks how long the 'low hire, low fire' economy continues and if uncertainty (tariffs, war) pushes out investment.
    Host (Lisa/Mike)
  • Christopher Waller
    Expresses concern about labor market weakness since last June. January data might signal a turn, but fragility remains; a serious shock could push it the wrong way.
  • Asks what it would take for him to back off his desire to cut rates, given narrow hiring breadth.
    Host (Lisa/Mike)
  • Christopher Waller
    Brain says January job number was good, but gut says it may not be that good due to concentration. Expects downward revision.
  • Poses scenario: strong labor market + oil-driven inflation. Asks if he'd be less inclined to cut rates.
    Host (Lisa/Mike)
  • Christopher Waller
    If we get another solid jobs report and hot PCE inflation (around 2.4%), it suggests labor market is turning and downside risks are fading. In that case, it's fine to wait.
  • Poses counterfactual: weak jobs report. Asks how the Fed should react given conflicting dual mandate.
    Host (Lisa/Mike)
  • Christopher Waller
    Acknowledges tension within committee: he's more worried about labor market, others more worried about persistent inflation. If labor market weakens (e.g., bad jobs number, downward revisions), the question becomes 'why are you just sitting on your hands?'
  • Asks what constitutes a 'good' jobs report.
    Host (Lisa/Mike)
  • Christopher Waller
    A good report would be another strong number like January, well above break-even estimates, making it two in a row. Strong ISM data also suggests things may be turning.
  • Christopher Waller
    Sees tariff risk as to the downside, not a source of price pressure. Expects tariffs to come down, deals to be made, reducing uncertainty and inflation pressure.
  • Questions efficacy of rate cuts for labor market if companies are frozen by tariff/war uncertainty.
    Host (Lisa/Mike)
  • Christopher Waller
    Defends Fed's role to act if labor market is not looking good, despite debates over monetary policy's effectiveness.
  • Asks for Fed's assessment of private credit market stress, given headlines about fund redemptions and fraud.
    Host (Lisa/Mike)
  • Christopher Waller
    Does not see big, widespread problems in private credit. Views fraud cases as one-off, not systemic. Differentiates between high-yield junk and better quality credit. Does not foresee serious trouble or financial stability problems.
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