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  4. Wharton professor Jeremy Siegel roasts Jerome Powell as the Fed continues to signal more rate hikes despite signs of falling inflation: 'I don't know what planet he lives on'

Wharton professor Jeremy Siegel roasts Jerome Powell as the Fed continues to signal more rate hikes despite signs of falling inflation: 'I don't know what planet he lives on'

Matthew Fox   

Wharton professor Jeremy Siegel roasts Jerome Powell as the Fed continues to signal more rate hikes despite signs of falling inflation: 'I don't know what planet he lives on'
  • Wharton professor Jeremy Siegel blasted Fed chair Jerome Powell for creating the inflation he seeks to now tame.
  • Siegel took issue with Powell's recent comments that he sees no evidence inflation is falling.
  • "Very honestly I don't know what planet he lives on!" Siegel said to CNBC's Scott Wapner.

Wharton professor Jeremy Siegel didn't pull any punches against Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell in a wide-ranging interview with CNBC on Friday.

Siegel took issue with Powell's continued resolve to hike interest rates even when evidence continues to build that inflation is coming down. The Fed is expected to hike interest rates by 50 basis points later this month, followed by another interest rate hike of at least 25 basis points early next year.

"One thing [Powell] said was: 'despite the tighter policy and slower growth over the past year, we have not seen clear progress on slowing inflation," Siegel said to CNBC's Scott Wapner. "You know, very honestly Scott I don't know what planet he lives on!"

"There's tremendous evidence of slowing inflation," Siegel said, pointing to falling home prices, a decline in housing rents, and a drop below 50 on the ISM index. Additionally, Siegel noted that while wages are growing at about 5% year-over-year, that's still well below the year-over-year inflation rate of 8%.

"Workers are trying to catch up and they're not. They're still falling well behind. It just disturbs me to think that the Fed policy is to crush wages so they go back down to 2%, basically saying to the worker 'you're not going to catch up to inflation, and we're going to prevent you from catching up to inflation.' That's an insane policy," Siegel said.

Siegel also took issue with the fact that the Fed's quantitative easing actions in 2020 and 2021 are mainly responsible for driving the inflation that they are now trying to quell.

"Yes, I'm very critical of the Fed. To be blunt, here's a Fed that caused the inflation by expanding liquidity greater than any other time in history, is basically talking as if, to the worker 'we're not going to let you catch up to the inflation that I caused.' That's a slap in the face to the American worker, in my opinion. I just don't think that is justified.... Is that good public policy?" Siegel asked.

Siegel said that when you replace lagged components of the CPI report with on-the-ground rental prices and housing prices, inflation is actually negative, not positive.

"You have to be forward looking, you can't be backwards looking when you're implementing policy," he said.

Finally, Siegel highlighted that investors should put little faith in the Fed's outlook given how badly they got it wrong late last year, when they said they weren't going to hike interest rates at all in 2023. Instead, the Fed is on track to hike interest rates by 400 basis points this year.

He concluded: "Remember a year ago in September, Jay Powell said: 'No increases in Fed funds will be necessary for 2022.' This was in September of last year. So now, when they increased it how many times, are we now to believe that they know what is going to happen in 2023? No. They're just going to follow the data."



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