It can be hard to keep up with all of the Fedspeak out there. We track that for you by reading and watching every speech, town hall, essay, and interview we can get our hands on and curate that in an easily digestible form. We pull out the relevant and interesting quotes from FOMC members and provide up-to-date estimates of each individual member’s SEP dot.
Fedspeak Monitor

Read the Latest
Read the Latest
Powell made the headlines with his rejection of any notion that President-elect Trump could force him to leave, but beyond that the November FOMC press conference was fairly boring (in a good way).
This is the last chance for Fedspeak before the pre-November meeting blackout period. This week we mostly heard from the hawkish side of the committee, all of whom are emphasizing a gradual path of rate cuts.
A quiet week of Fedspeak, with Waller and Bostic expressing disappointment in the September inflation data.
With fears of rising unemployment falling a bit with the September jobs data, the Committee's focus shifts back a bit towards inflation. As with before the September rate cut, the Committee is divided in its confidence around inflation's path back to 2%.
We had some Fedspeak this week but mostly people stuck to their previous views.
With labor market risk rearing its head, Kashkari and Bostic sound dovish again.
A little bit of post-game analysis from Bowman and Waller. Waller defends 50 by pointing to the implications of the CPI and PPI data received during blackout period for core PCE.
It's the last week of Fedspeak before the blackout period for the September meeting. Everyone speaking this week is on board with Powell's assessment that the labor market is at least balanced.
A quiet week after Jackson Hole. What we did hear this past week showed that Powell has some convincing to do on the Committee.