Federal Reserve
Chair Janet Yellen on Wednesday said high equity valuations could pose
potential dangers but that stability risks across the U.S. financial
system remained in check.
"I would highlight that equity market valuations at this point generally are quite high," Yellen said. "There are potential dangers there."
Yellen's view on the run-up in stocks was an answer to questions from International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde, who joined the Fed chief for the opening session of the "Finance and Society" conference here.
"We’ve also seen the compression of spreads on high-yield debt, which certainly looks like a reach for yield type of behavior," Yellen said.
U.S. stocks were trading lower following the comments, building on earlier declines triggered by weak private job data.
Another potential trouble spot that Yellen pointed out was low long-term interest rates, which could spike as the Fed normalizes its policy, causing disruption across the financial system.
“When the Fed decides it’s time to begin raising rates, these term premiums could move up and we could see a sharp jump in long-term rates. So we’re trying to ... communicate as clearly about our monetary policy so we don’t take markets by surprise,” she said.
U.S. Treasuries continued to slide for a ninth straight day on Wednesday amid a global bond sell-off, with longer-maturity Treasuries declining the most.
Yellen tempered these remarks by saying that she did not see any bubbles forming at the moment, and she described risks to financial stability as "moderated, not elevated."
The question and answer session with Lagarde occurred after the two delivered similar speeches highlighting the need to continue reining in risk across the banking sector.
Yellen also noted concerns about potential liquidity problems facing certain asset-managers should they face a wave of redemptions.
"I would highlight that equity market valuations at this point generally are quite high," Yellen said. "There are potential dangers there."
Yellen's view on the run-up in stocks was an answer to questions from International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde, who joined the Fed chief for the opening session of the "Finance and Society" conference here.
"We’ve also seen the compression of spreads on high-yield debt, which certainly looks like a reach for yield type of behavior," Yellen said.
U.S. stocks were trading lower following the comments, building on earlier declines triggered by weak private job data.
Another potential trouble spot that Yellen pointed out was low long-term interest rates, which could spike as the Fed normalizes its policy, causing disruption across the financial system.
“When the Fed decides it’s time to begin raising rates, these term premiums could move up and we could see a sharp jump in long-term rates. So we’re trying to ... communicate as clearly about our monetary policy so we don’t take markets by surprise,” she said.
U.S. Treasuries continued to slide for a ninth straight day on Wednesday amid a global bond sell-off, with longer-maturity Treasuries declining the most.
Yellen tempered these remarks by saying that she did not see any bubbles forming at the moment, and she described risks to financial stability as "moderated, not elevated."
The question and answer session with Lagarde occurred after the two delivered similar speeches highlighting the need to continue reining in risk across the banking sector.
Yellen also noted concerns about potential liquidity problems facing certain asset-managers should they face a wave of redemptions.


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