KEY POINTS
  • Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell insisted Wednesday that the central bank is not deliberately trying to cause a recession and that the economy is on solid footing.
  • "With all due respect to that comment, it's just not consistent with the data on the ground," said RBC economist Tom Porcelli.
  • In the aftermath of Wednesday's decision to raise benchmark interest rates 75 basis points, Wall Street reaction coalesced around a few common themes.

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell's insistence that the central bank is not deliberately trying to cause a recession and that the economy is on solid footing is exactly what someone in his position would be expected to say.

The trouble is, the Fed's likely to get a recession anyway as data shows the economy is a far cry from stable.