Until the March 10 failure of Silicon Valley Bank the higher- and stickier-than-expected path of inflation had warranted steady Fed rate hikes - a singular focus that shaped the policy views of Powell and his colleagues for much of 2022 and several months into 2023. But uncertainty about the health of the banking industry has now touched off a scramble by U.S. regulators, lawmakers and politicians to figure out if a broader financial crisis is developing and how to tighten supervision and regulation in response.
'CLEAR RECOGNITION' For now, Powell said he thought the problems would be contained to California-based SVB and the smaller New York-based Signature Bank , whose failures were deemed a "systemic risk" by U.S. officials and prompted the Fed to rapidly stand up a new lending facility for banks facing unusual withdrawal demands. Those facilities as well as other programs at the central bank are meant to address financial stability concerns so monetary policy can address inflation, which is still running at more than double the Fed's 2% target. Data on the first full week of borrowing from that facility will be released on Thursday, followed by data on Friday showing the systemwide changes in bank deposits. In his news conference, Powell said deposit flows from banks appeared to have "stabilized over the last week," even as U.S. money market funds attracted their biggest weekly inflows in nearly three years. The political and regulatory situation, however, remains fluid. The Fed has launched its own review of how supervision of SVB may have broken down and allowed the lender to fail even though regulators had identified problems as far back as 2019. The U.S. Senate Banking Committee is holding hearings on the bank failures next week. Some lawmakers have proposed legislation to toughen the Fed's oversight. After raising rates at a record pace over the past year "there is a clear recognition that it may be time to pause," said Rick Rieder, chief investment officer of global fixed income at BlackRock. "The challenges facing the (Federal Open Market Committee) today ... take on a particular aura of complexity." (Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Paul Simao)