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Bernanke's Bag of Hammers
by Brady Willett
FallStreet.com
June 7, 2006
After
one of the most concerted rhetorical attacks on the threat of inflation
in recent memory, Bernanke’s Fed has pushed the odds of a June rate
hike above 80%. It goes without saying that stocks – which
rallied last week as June rate hike expectations plunged below 50% -
have been hurt this week.
Unless Bernanke and company want to convince the markets that they see
the Fed’s rate hiking campaign continuing into the second half of
2006, they need to zip it. To be sure, three Fed officials (Bernanke,
Bies, and Poole) have spent the last two days waving their inflation
fighting flags because they wanted investors to understand that a rate
hike at the end of June was a forgone conclusion. Mission
accomplished. Any further flag waving could make investor’s
think that the Fed has gone mad. After all, in March the Fed was
contemplating a pause, in April Bernanke was suggesting a pause regardless
of the inflation readings, and the pause theme played in theaters across
the world in May. All of sudden – as if the Fed never had access to
commodity prices – the pause story has left the building?
In other words, the reason why the Fed needs to zip it is because it is
impossible to micromanage investor expectations and financial markets.
Moreover, any consistent attempt to do so is likely to achieve
undesirable effects. Here is a hypothetical: the Dow Jones Industrial
Average plunges by 1,279 points tomorrow and the Fed needs (or thinks
they need) to intervene to stop the selling. With one phrase -
‘liquidity baby!’ – Bubbles’ Greenspan would be able to bounce
the Dow higher by 700 points the next day. By contrast, Bernanke,
already armed with the baggage of his pause flip-flopping and ‘lapse
of judgement’ comments, is perhaps only able to will a 200 point
rebound…
Point being, in an attempt to acquire inflation fighting credibility the
Fed could lose their crisis fighting abilities. This would especially be
the case if the Fed, either via an incredible overshoot in rates or
continued display of disjointed verbiage, were to play a major role in
sparking such a crisis.
And yes, the Nikkei dropped below its 200-DMA overnight.
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© 2006 Brady Willett
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