BCN-01 US Treasury secretary: Economy strong, stock drop a ‘natural correction’

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US Treasury secretary: Economy strong, stock drop a ‘natural correction’

WASHINGTON, Oct 13, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said
Friday the US economy remained strong and this week’s decline in the stock
market was “just a natural correction.”

After two days of sharp drops in US and global stock markets over fears of
rising interest rates and the US trade conflicts, Mnuchin said in an
interview on CNBC that markets tended to go “too far in both directions” and
then would have to correct.

But he said it was a “good thing” that Wall Street was poised to recover
on Friday. He was speaking on the sidelines of the International Monetary
Fund annual meeting in Bali, Indonesia.

After an unusually volatile day in which stocks dipped in and out of the
red, Wall Street’s main indices closed up solidly for the day but, with
earlier losses, were all still down about four percent for the week.

Investors also were watching the start of corporate earnings season, with
major banks posting positive quarterly results on Friday morning.

Analysts said third-quarter earnings could reveal the extent to which US
President Donald Trump’s trade conflicts might have dented profits.

Mnuchin also downplayed concerns about Trump’s repeated and aggressive
attacks on the US Federal Reserve this week, saying Trump “respects the
independence of the Fed.”

– Powell doing a ‘great job’ –

Trump has by turns called the Fed “crazy” and “loco” and said it was being
“too aggressive in raising rates,” blaming the institution for the market
declines that saw the benchmark Dow Jones Industrial Average lose nearly
1,400 points in two days.

“The president’s been clear. He likes low interest rates. I think that’s
really what it was about,” Mnuchin said, adding that Fed chairman Jerome
Powell was “doing a great job.”

“I think the fundamentals are still very strong. The US economy is strong,
US earnings are strong. So I see this as just a natural correction after the
markets were up a lot.”

Powell in the past has brushed off Trump’s taunts, saying political
independence was in central bankers’ “DNA.”

Despite Trump’s attacks on the central bank, economists say that, with
unemployment at its lowest level in 48 years and monthly job creation holding
steady, the Fed is likely to stick to its current course of rate hikes, with
a fourth increase expected in December, and three or four in 2019.

Some Fed policymakers who in January will take a turn as voting members of
the rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee have begun to send more
hawkish signals, putting them increasingly at odds with Trump.

BSS/AFP/HR/0905