Every year, a three-day symposium is held in a beautiful mountainous area of the United States, just south of Yellowstone National Park. Jackson Hole, sat in a valley with an historic town square, hosts skiers in the winter, central bankers in the summer.
For those interested in macroeconomics, these are often the key discussions, whether it is on the effect of central banks’ balance sheets on financial stability, the effect of tech giants on the economy, or the causes of inflation.
It is also where announcements are made. For instance, in 2020, US Federal Reserve Board chairman Jerome Powell announced a new policy for raising interest rates that was not simply based on joblessness or inflation expectations. The importance of these meetings often be seen in the reactions of stock markets and bond markets.
This year’s meeting, from 22-24 August, comes after a spate of turmoil in the financial markets at the beginning of August, as panic spread following the publication of a US jobs report and signs that Japan was tightening its monetary policy. Vast amounts vanished overnight, before a partial correction the following day.
Keep calm and carry on
All eyes had been on the US Federal Reserve (aka ‘the Fed’) in anticipation of an emergency interest rate cut to reassure markets, after it was accused of lagging behind other major central banks, such as the Bank of England.
But the Fed remained calm, instead insisting on its upcoming scheduled meetings to discuss the interest rate issue, set for September.
Investors are among the groups who want to know the overall economic direction, to inform their decisions. The Jackson Hole meetings help them decide whether to be bullish or bearish, buy or sell, seek stocks or bolt for bonds.