Editor's note: Morning Money is a free version of POLITICO Pro Financial Services morning newsletter, which is delivered to our subscribers each morning at 5:15 a.m. The POLITICO Pro platform combines the news you need with tools you can use to take action on the day's biggest stories. Act on the news with POLITICO Pro . Inflation is cooling, but the Federal Reserve isn't going away. How Fed chief Jay Powell messages those two ideas simultaneously will be center stage on Wednesday when he holds a press conference after central bank policymakers meet. Two words you might hear a lot from him: 2 percent. The Fed has shied away from relying too heavily on forecasting in its battle against inflation, given how confusing the data has been during the pandemic . Models have been suggesting for months that price spikes will be steadily slowing from here . And it's good news that those projections are finally starting to play out in the actual topline numbers as they did on Tuesday, when the government said inflation in November slowed sharply to 7.1 percent from the previous year. But Powell wants to see the number coming back to 2 percent, and we're nowhere close to that. Convincing financial markets that the Fed won't call it a day soon on hiking interest rates has been tricky for officials this year because investors have also been seeing reasons to expect inflation to come down in their projections. Matt Luzzetti, chief U.S. economist at Deutsche Bank, said markets are notably optimistic about the outlook for inflation — somewhat ironically because they still expect a high chance of recession, which would likely mean a significant rise in the unemployment rate. Powell himself has pointed to accelerating wage growth as the biggest remaining barrier to getting inflation all the way down, and a recession would be expected to reverse that trend. In general, though, the market exuberance is unhelpful, Luzzetti said. "I don't think we've seen a tightening of financial conditions that would tell me that the Fed has done enough to get inflation down to target over time," he said. "Without that happening it's hard to see the outcome that markets have priced for inflation next year." Of course, Fed policymakers will be releasing their own projections, and Powell could also face the tricky task of explaining any evidence that his fellow rate-setters expect rate cuts next year. After four straight meetings where they raised interest rates by three-quarters of a percentage point, Fed policymakers are set to slow to half a percentage point. That's the carrot. The stick is that the central bank still plans to keep raising rates into next year. But how high? MM checked in with Ellen Meade, a former senior Fed economist who worked on the central bank's communications. She said she expects changes to its post-meeting statement that suggests they need to tighten their grip on the economy further, but in a way that's vague about how exactly that will happen. "In addressing risk management, [Powell] should continue to say that the risks associated with doing too little are larger than the risks of doing too much," said Meade, now a research professor in the economics department at Duke. IT'S WEDNESDAY — Please send tips to ssutton@politico.com and zwarmbrodt@politico.com .
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