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By omitting a few key words from their most recent statement, the Fed led
Wall Street to the premature conclusion that the next move in interest rates
will be down. With the economy clearly headed for recession, there is no doubt
that the Fed would like nothing more than to do just that. However, given that
it wants to pretend otherwise, and considering the damage it would do to the
already shaky U.S. dollar, an actually rate cut seems highly suspect.
Rather than offering a true assessment of the current economy, the official
statement that follows Fed meetings has become a political farce used primarily
to placate markets. For the bond market and the dollar, the Fed pretends that
inflation is still under control, and that the Fed remains poised to snuff
out any inflationary sparks should they appear. For Wall Street, the housing
markets, and the economy in general, the Fed pretends that the economic expansion
will continue, but shows mild concern that growth might falter.
If the Fed were to admit that the economy was in trouble, the stock market
would sell off, led lower by a collapse in the dollar and a potential spike
in long-term interest rates. With its parsed language, the Fed preserves the
pretense that all is well while simultaneously allowing for the possibility
of future easing. So by validating the goldilocks scenario, but holding the
door open to future rate cuts, they can have their cake and eat it too.
One of the biggest bones the Fed threw to the markets in its last statement
was its failure to directly mention the problems developing in the mortgage
market. This omission suggests that the Fed is not overly concerned with the
subprime crisis, or the possibility of that weakness spreading into the broader
mortgage market or the economy in general. In other words, a problem isn't
a problem until the Fed says it is. This ignores the fact that the Fed is reluctant
to actually identify a problem, no matter how severe; for fear that such recognition
alone might spark an even greater panic.
So with the apparent blessing of the Fed, Wall Street can now borrow a page
from the Las Vegas promotional playbook and claim that the "what happens in
sub-prime stays in sub-prime." Unfortunately, like an out of work showgirl
with a folder full of embarrassing photos, the problems with subprime will
soon show up on everyone's doorstep.
Think of the Fed as a juggler trying to keep five balls in the air simultaneously.
Those balls are the stock market, the bond market, the dollar, the housing
market, and the economy. If the Fed tells the truth, all the balls will come
crashing down. So it says what it needs to say to keep them all in play. However,
my guess is the first ball to fall will be the dollar, which sold off immediately
following the release of the Fed's statement. Compounding the problem is a
recent report that China may no longer be willing to expand its foreign exchange
reserves. This means the dollar ball is about to get a lot heavier. Once the
dollar breaks down the bond market ball will be that much more difficult to
keep aloft. Once it falls, the rest will soon follow.
The bottom line is that waiting for the next rate cut is going to be a lot
like waiting for Godot. The Fed wants everyone to think one is coming, but
will likely never deliver the goods. If I am wrong and the Fed actually does
cut, expect the easing cycle to be extremely short-lived, as an embarrassed
Fed will be forced by the bond and currency markets to quickly reverse course.
Wall Street mistakenly believes that the Fed's job is to keep the expansion
going. In reality, the Fed's job is to take the punch bowl away from spendthrift
American consumers and the leveraged speculators lending them money. If the
Fed were to actually do its job, they would accelerate the onset of the inevitable
recession. Perpetuating a phony expansion only compounds the problems that
a recession would help solve. However, by repeatedly spiking the punch bowl
rather than removing it, the Fed merely guarantees a much bigger hang-over
when it inevitably runs dry.
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trouble, read my new book "Crash Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic
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