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What to Expect From the Fed

by coldwarrior ( 119 Comments › )
Filed under Economy, government, Misery Index at April 6th, 2011 - 12:00 pm

The Fed’s mandate is to do two things: Promote Maximum Employment AND Promote Stable Prices. They have to fight inflation (less dollars in the system) while trying to make sure there is enough credit in the market so that businesses can borrow at low interest rates to expand and operate to create jobs.

Inflation (too much money in the system) versus employment (cheap credit=more money in the system). The Fed’s only tool is money supply.

So, here is what to expect from the Fed:

Bernanke Faces Possible Fed Split on Maintaining Stimulus

 

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke may have to overcome divisions among policy makers should he seek to maintain record stimulus past June, minutes of the Fed’s March 15 meeting indicate.

A “few” among the central bank’s 17 governors and regional bank presidents said tighter credit may be warranted this year, while a “few others noted that exceptional policy accommodation could be appropriate beyond 2011,” the Federal Open Market Committee said in the minutes, released yesterday in Washington.

Stocks and Treasuries fell on speculation the Fed may start to tighten policy sooner than previously forecast after it completes its $600 billion bond-purchase program in June…

You’ve got lower-than-desired growth and the potential for higher-than-desired inflation here, and it definitely complicates the picture from a policy standpoint,” said Hembre, chief economist and investment strategist in Minneapolis at Nuveen Asset Management, which oversees about $197 billion.

Several FOMC members “indicated, in light of recent developments, that the risks to their forecasts of inflation had shifted somewhat to the upside,” the minutes said.

Inflation Readings

Since the March FOMC meeting, reports showed the labor market and inflation have picked up while consumer confidence slipped and new home sales dropped to a record low. Some regional Fed presidents who were skeptical of stimulus have talked about the need to tighten credit, and Bernanke has yet to indicate his preference for the Fed’s next move.

Even with the division, Bernanke and his top deputies, Vice Chairman Janet Yellen and New York Fed President William Dudley, are unlikely to favor tighter policy this year, Hembre said. “They’re the leadership,” Hembre said. “They’ll dominate the debate and they’ll win.”

While the decision last month to continue the bond purchases was unanimous, the Fed said a few of the 10 voting members of the committee thought evidence of a stronger recovery, higher inflation and rising inflation expectations “could make it appropriate to reduce the pace or overall size of the purchase program,” the minutes said. “Several others” said they “did not anticipate making adjustments.”

Yield Climbs

U.S. stocks erased gains following the release of the minutes. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index was little changed at 1,332.63 at the close of trading in New York after rising as much as 0.4 percent before the Fed report. The yield on the 10- year Treasury note climbed to 3.48 percent from 3.42 percent the day before.

In releases since the Fed meeting, the Commerce Department reported that the central bank’s preferred price measure, which excludes food and fuel, was up 0.9 percent from a year earlier in February, the most since October. Including all items, prices rose 1.6 percent, compared with a 1.2 percent 12- month increase through January, the biggest monthly increase since December 2009.

Several FOMC members “indicated, in light of recent developments, that the risks to their forecasts of inflation had shifted somewhat to the upside,” according to the minutes. Bernanke said on April 4 in Stone Mountain, Georgia that policy makers must watch inflation “extremely closely” for evidence that rising commodity costs are having more than a temporary impact on consumer prices.

‘Abrupt Change’

“I don’t think we’re going to get a fast or abrupt change in policy,” said Stephen Stanley, chief economist at Pierpont Securities LLC in Stamford, Connecticut, on Bloomberg Radio’s “The Hays Advantage.”

“But clearly the center of gravity, I think, is starting to slowly but surely shift to a more hawkish bent as the inflation data start to pick up a little bit,” said Stanley, a former Fed researcher, using a term for Fed officials who are more inclined to tighten credit to fight price increases.

The Fed’s reluctance to tighten contrasts with some of its counterparts. European Central Bank policy makers have signaled that they may raise their benchmark interest rate from a record low of 1 percent when they next meet April 7, while China raised borrowing costs yesterday for the fourth time since the global financial crisis to limit the risk of asset price bubbles in the world’s fastest-growing major economy.

‘Moderate Pace’

Fed staff economists at the meeting gave a forecast for a “moderate pace” of 2011 and 2012 growth similar to projections at the last session in January, while lowering their forecast for the unemployment rate. Even so, “the jobless rate was still expected to decline slowly and to remain elevated at the end of 2012,” the minutes said.

Hembre said he reduced his U.S. growth forecast for 2011 yesterday to 2.5 percent from 3 percent, and for the first quarter to 3 percent from 3.5 percent, because “it looks like a fairly weak quarter for domestic demand in spite of the fact that we had a payroll tax cut in the first quarter that boosted disposable income.”

 

You’ve got lower-than-desired growth and the potential for higher-than-desired inflation here, and it definitely complicates the picture from a policy standpoint,” said Hembre, chief economist and investment strategist in Minneapolis at Nuveen Asset Management, which oversees about $197 billion.

Low growth coupled with inflation…throw in $4 gas and we just might be headed for it…Stagflation.

Normally, low growth and an enemic economy would have no threat of inflation, except now, we have high oil that makes everything more expensive AND we have entirely too many dollars in the system…both produce inflation. High oil makes transportation and manufacturing costs higher = inflation. Combine that with too many dollars multiplied by the velocity of money that will go higher as GDP rises (economy improves even slightly) and we have unstoppable inflation. It would be easier if the economy was booming, then the Fed could raise interest rates and slow everything down or if the4re werent supply side shocks and too much money in the system the Fed could lower rates to get the place running again. This isn’t an option, interest rates are at ZERO for all intents and purposes and businesses are afraid to expand because of the cost of new employees.

There is no short term fix for this.  Regulation and taxation has to become more Employment Friendly (notice I didn’t say ‘business friendly’ see it’s all how you word it, like Pro-Choice instead of Pro-Abortion) and the government (and that means every0ne) has to reign in the economy and cut cut cut to get the debt and deficit eliminated or at least back to a level where it is not destroying the economy for all of us. That means tough cuts for everyone.

Weaker Dollar will not help the US economy

by Phantom Ace ( 207 Comments › )
Filed under Blogwars, Democratic Party, Economy, Leftist-Islamic Alliance, Progressives, Socialism at November 16th, 2010 - 2:00 pm

Fed chairman, Ben Bernanke, has begun implementing his QE2 to combat deflation. This is de facto devaluation of the dollar and its goal is to create some inflation so people will spend. Another side effect of devaluation is making American goods cheaper for exports. The thinking is that cheaper American goods will lead to demand for these products and thus create jobs. The problem is this will not work in today’s environment as the US doesn’t produce much for export anymore. The Economic model pushed by both parties was to have Americans as consumers, not producers. The truth is this QE2 gamble will not kick start the US economy.

A weakening currency traditionally helps a country raise its exports and create more jobs for its workers. But the declining value of the dollar may not help the United States increase economic growth as much as it might have in the past.

Though a weakened dollar would help exports to some degree, business executives and economists said that because of the ways American multinational companies operated, it was uncertain whether it would cause much of an increase in hiring.

[…]

Even when a company enjoys a relative surge in foreign sales, it won’t necessarily lead to a hiring spree. That is because the largest proportion of American exports are still manufactured goods, which are no longer so labor-intensive.

And many of the companies that still manufacture in this country are businesses that have not gone offshore because they are too small to justify setting up overseas operations. A weak dollar can help their businesses, but it may not prompt a wave of hiring.

Read the rest: Weaker Dollar Seen as Unlikely to Cure Joblessness

At this point the Federal reserve and the Obama administration are using gimmicks to get the economy going. The only solution is to massively reform our tax code and regulatory system to make America attractive to foreign capital. This is what will create jobs, not a currency devaluation. Many nations around the world have tried currency devaluations and the result was economic stagnation. Until hard choices are made in regards to our fiscal situation, America will continue to be the sick man of the global economy.

Quantitative Easing 2…

by coldwarrior ( 215 Comments › )
Filed under Economy at November 8th, 2010 - 11:30 am

This is another relatively dense Economics Post, please familiarize yourself with the following two articles:

Lost Decade Background

Inflation versus Deflation Background

As we all know, the Fed is about to purchase $600 billion dollars worth of motes and bonds at a pace of $75 billion a month through June to reduce unemployment and avoid deflation. Yes, we are monetarizing some of our debt, and this is always a tricky thing to unwind. The function of the Federal Reserve, as mandated by congress, is to do two things: promote a high level of employment and have low/stable inflation. The Fed has done a nice job since Volker slayed the inflation dragon in the early 1980’s. Through two booms and two recessions, inflation was kept in check and unemployment was neither too high, not lasted very long.  Now we have a different busted bubble.

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Please read Chairman Bernanke’s Op-Ed piece for the Fed explanation of why QE 2 is happening.

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The Fed does not write budgets, nor does it spend the money. It tries to promote a high level of employment while trying to keep inflation down. Normally, in high employment, there is inflation, and in low employment there is low inflation. Inflation is a product of too much money chasing not enough goods, provided there is some velocity to the money (see above link on inflation/deflation). Right now there is no velocity to the money, therefore the supply can be rather large, if no one is spending/hiring/making large capital purchases, then there is no velocity. All the money in the world sitting in a giant pile with no one spending it will not result in inflation.

What the Fed is trying to do is to put more money in circulation, causing interest rates to go down so that more spending will occur. They are trying to get some velocity in the markets. The Fed has three ‘valves’ that it can adjust. The adjustments are through reserve requirements on banks, buying and selling T bills and notes, and by setting the Federal Funds Rate that banks charge each other to loan money to each other. The buying and selling or Open Market Operations is the most common and most predictable and precise tool the Fed has.

The Fed is planning to buy $75 billion a month of T-bills and notes through June to reduce unemployment and avoid deflation, not $600 billion at one time…The Fed has signaled and Bernanke has stated that we are more likely to see deflation than inflation, so the pump is going to be turned on, full blast. Deflation is far worse then inflation. Some inflation means there is some demand. Deflation will cause even more unemployment and a very, very horrible downward spiral. The Fed is buying mostly short term paper, 5 and 10 year notes.  This drives down the yield on the 5 and 10’s and the yields on the 30 year up, or more simply, this reduces the interest rates short term and pushed more money into the economy for cheaper lending. The plan is, if there are signs of inflation and/or better employment, the pump will be turned down. That is why this is being done in 8 individual month steps. The Fed is seeing no signs of inflation right now and is guarding against deflation.

More money in, lower interest rates, higher inflation, lower value of the dollar…see these things dont happen in a vacuum. By lowering interest rates through an expansion of the money supply, the dollar becomes less valuable over seas. This can be referred to as competitive devaluation. This can get dangerous because our trading partners will act the same way (not that China has forcible held down the Yuan so her goods are cheap and she can have full export employment).  More dollars means exports are more expensive, therefore, more things should be made here, more dollars also normally means that you import inflation as well. This devaluation of the dollar becasue of more dollars in circulation will get the international community all worked up. There will be calls for a new agreements for currency value ranges, maybe even a gold peg, or basket of currency peg. No one knows where this will lead in the long term.

The threat that QE2 has to other countries makes me ask the question, is this QE2 a bargaining chip/leverage for the US to have for the upcoming G20 talks this week?

We know that business in the US is not spending because they have no idea what the future holds. Perhaps now with the Republican Congress, some stability can return. What must happen in ‘The Long Term’ is reduction of Federal Debt to a realistic level (there will never be a balanced Federal Budget) some debt is needed and is not necessarily a bad thing. The retirement age is going to have to be increased to 70 if not 72. Federal Spending is going to have to be greatly reduced, and last but not least, regulations and taxes have to be reduced on business and industry so we can manufacture things again. Spending like Democrats while using your house as an ATM is not a real economy, as we just saw as that bubble burst. The Fed is walking a tightrope here, this is a dangerous move. If it works, Bernanke will look like a genius, if it doesn’t, well, we are all in really big trouble. He might just be pushing on a rope here unless President Obama gets out of business’ way (which wont happen). Some strikes against the Health Care bill by the Congress in January could go a long way to starting to get out of this slump.

OK, Federal Reserve Chairmen, what suggestions do you have?

The Obama Boom is back!

by Phantom Ace ( 333 Comments › )
Filed under Barack Obama, Democratic Party, Economy, Liberal Fascism, Misery Index, Progressives, Socialism, Tranzis at November 5th, 2010 - 2:00 pm

It’s back, just when you though the media had realized we are living in a 3rd world style stagnant economy they are proclaiming things are good. The US economy added 151,000 jobs in October. This number is just enough to keep up with population growth and is anemic compared to the 250,000-300,000 jobs that was create monthly during America’s economic golden age in the 80’s and 90’s. When Bush was in power, the press bashed him when 150,000 jobs were created monthly during the 2000’s. They claimed it was proof the economy was stagnant and sucked. Yet now, it’s a boom that is unprecedented in human history!

U.S. employment increased more than expected last month as private companies hired workers at the fastest pace since April, a sign the sluggish economy is starting to tick up.

Nonfarm payrolls rose a solid 151,000 in October, the first increase since May, the Labor Department said on Friday. A 159,000-jump in private employment more than offset a 8,000 drop in government payrolls.

[….]

“So it’s still within the realm of a moderate recovery. It’s both better than people had been looking for and it’s another nail in the coffin of a double dip,” said Nigel Gault, chief U.S. economist at IHS Global Insight in Lexington, Mass

Read the rest:  Economy Picks Up 151,000 Jobs, Rate Steadies at 9.6%

Happy days are here again! The economy is soaring and wealth is being created again! The reality is this is mediocre job growth and a stagnant economy. The Fed is printing $600 Billion to create inflation based demand. The problem is with stagnant and falling wages, this will erode American growth. This devaluation of the dollar is already creating anger overseas, especially with our debt owner China. It should create anger here because it will devalue our standard of living!

Don’t worry, the economy is booming, nothing to see here!