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Over the past fortnight Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke has engaged in "open mouth
operations" to shape market expectations regarding future monetary policy out
of the US Federal Reserve. Mr. Bernanke rhetorically intervened in the global
currency markets to prop up a beleaguered dollar, explicitly expressed unease
over the current course of inflation and signaled that the Fed would not tolerate
a breakout of inflation expectations. Not bad, for a Fed Chairman fighting
multiple crisis on multiple fronts.
The concerns over inflation expectations expressed by Mr. Bernanke and the
more intense hawkishness expressed by Dallas Fed President Richard Fisher and
Richmond Fed President Jeffrey Lacker are well founded. Public expectations
over short-term inflation have soared. According to the University of Michigan
the public expects that over the next year inflation will increase 5.5% and
the Conference Board's twelve-month gauge suggest a 7.7% rise in the year ahead.
Even market sentiment, which has lagged public sentiment, has changed.

The market, caught off guard by the rapid change in expectations and surprised
by the speed and sustained switch in rhetoric out of the Fed, changed its expectations
of rate hikes in confused haste. Using federal funds futures rates as a metric
for measuring changing market sentiment traders now expect that the Fed will
hike rates by 50bps before the end of the year with a 37.1% probability of
75bps in hikes by the end of the year.
Under normal circumstances, I would welcome a return of the hawkish instincts
that underlie the foundation of Mr. Bernanke's hallmark academic work on inflation
targeting. Such a hawkish turn would compliment my own theoretical orientation
and normative preferences regarding appropriate monetary policy and the necessity
of a single focus on price stability.
Such a potential move by the central bank is in line with the systematic case
I have been making over the past several months regarding the future impact
on inflation expectations caused by the rise in energy and commodity prices.
The entire efficacy of contemporary Fed policy is hinged on a stable set of
expectations and the slow and steady upward movement in those expectations
over the past few months has stimulated the gravest crises faced by the Fed
in many years.
While, a case can be made that there is little threat to macroeconomic stability
from inflation until wage demands begin to work their way through the system,
I do not concur. By the time that unit labor costs begin to rise and a newly
minted Congress bestows upon labor newfound power, it will be to late. The
pain that would be necessary to inflict on the public to combat a such a breakout
of wage-push inflation is way beyond what our current political system and
the likely leftward composition of the next Congress will be willing to stomach.
That being said, once one takes a step back and looks at the recent statements
of Mr. Bernanke in the proper context, these are good reasons to be more than
a bit skeptical of the recent hawkishness out of the Fed chair. Let me elaborate.
Given the continued stress in financial markets, an economy moving sideways
and a consumer that remains under duress we are highly suspect of the recent
claims by the Fed chair that rate hikes are imminent. Moreover a simple observation
of the movement in markets is quite instructive of the real problem the Fed
currently faces.
Perhaps, other than the clear change in the federal funds futures market,
the most startling shift has occurred is in fixed income space, where curve
steepening trades have been rapidly unwound. The spread between 2yr and 10yr
yields has closed quite quickly. This has put an unexpected bout of pressure
on financial firms, who rely on the ability to borrow short and lend long and
thought that they had reached a short-term point of stability. Why have financials
continued to tank? In addition to the lingering uncertainty over the condition
of their books, it is due to the newfound hawkishness on the part of Mr. Bernanke.
Why is this so problematic? Unless, Mr. Bernanke is willing to undo much of
the patchwork that his innovative and unorthodox approach to shoring up the
financial system over the past several months has accomplished, we do not see
him urging his colleagues to move quite quickly on rates,
Second, we are approaching what will be a very close and contentious Presidential
election in the United States. After doing a bit of research, I was able to
observe that with the exception of Paul Volker's rate increase ahead of the
Reagan-Carter match in 1980 and Alan Greenspan's hike before the 1992 election
between Clinton and Bush the elder, Fed chairman have been quite careful to
steer clear of Presidential elections. It would be nice to believe that the
central bank independence has been thoroughly absorbed by our monetary officials
and that price stability would outweigh political considerations. But it does
strike me as quite difficult to believe that Mr. Bernanke would hike rates,
not once, but twice according to current market expectations, in advance of
the election. This would surely facilitate the election of a candidate that
would summarily reject Bernanke's reappointment early in the first term the
new President.
The net effect of all of the sound and fury that the market has experienced
over the past few days, will in all probability, be to set up a confrontation
down the road between the market and the Fed. My own ex-ante GDP forecast strongly
suggests that after two consecutive quarters of sub 2.0% growth through the
middle of 2008, that output will fall back towards zero to conclude the year.
I think that the Fed is counting on both output and resource utilization (unemployment)
easing later this year to provide cover for their continued dovish policy.
In fact, Fed Vice-Chair Donald Kohn, who since the crisis began last August,
has been something of a useful barometer for those of use who attempt to derive
what the Fed will do next. Mr. Kohn in his most recent statement made the case
that the proper policy path for the Fed may be to tolerate higher inflation
and higher unemployment in fact of a commodity shock of the sort that we are
facing today. This fact that it was made at a Boston Fed conference discussing
the trade off between unemployment and inflation, better known as the "Phillips
Curve," is no accident.
What all of this tells this economist is that the Fed is going to continue
to tolerate inflation, attempt to manage inflation expectations and quite simply
buy time for the financial system to repair itself. If the Fed truly wanted
to get serious about inflation and signal the start of a rate hiking cycle,
it would begin to reduce the growth of the money base, set a date for the end
of the "temporary auction facility" and raise rates at the next meeting. But
it will not.
Unfortunately, the unintended consequence of this very delicate balancing
act is that a potent dénouement is forming over the horizon in which
the market will move to demand that the Fed move to increase rates, well before
it is ready to do so. With the very credible signals out of the European Central
Bank that rates hikes are just around the corner, with each passing day, the
Fed finds itself slowly but surely painted into policy path that upon further
review is not of its choosing. The inability or unwillingness to act on the
part of the Fed will have a deleterious impact on the dollar and with it a
reduction in the living standard of individual Americans.
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