Fed Punts Decisions to March
Posted by Michael A. Kamperman on December 16, 2009
The Bernanke led Fed is divided. Some want to render more aid to the economy now. Others wish to withdraw support and head off future inflation. Both sides have agreed in a grand bargain to wait for more data and to wait until they have to make a real decision. The deadline is March 2010 when the current round of quantitative easing is scheduled to end. That is when the Fed is scheduled to end its purchases of Agency debt and of Agency issued mortgages. Until then they neither have to end or extend quantitative easing. The Fed is watching unemployment and capacity utilization. Between now and the end of March the private sector and the state governments will shed more jobs. The predictions by the leading economists are for the real economy to begin to add private sector jobs in the first quarter of 2010. It’s not going to happen. What is going to happen is the federal government will add almost one million temporary jobs to work on the 2010 census. But all of these jobs will end at the end of 2010. The Fed needs to back these jobs out of the next few unemployment reports to get a clear picture of where the economy is heading. Otherwise they may make a decision based on a false reading of economic vitality.
The CPI report showed the core rate of inflation is currently zero. This in spite of the dollar declining gold led rise in November oil prices. That trend has already reversed and the dollar has bottomed in the near term. It’s not because the U.S. is doing so much better. It’s because the veil has been lifted on the euro and the reality of the economic calamity facing countries like Greece, Spain, and Ireland has been laid bare. The CPI reports will soon trend negative. It is only the cold winter that is holding keeping the price of oil from collapsing. It is certainly not economic activity.
The Fed is definitely behind the curve. But it is not the inflation curve they are behind, it is the deflation curve. Prices will keep falling in housing and real goods in search of demand. The banks continue to tighten credit. The Obama Administration has chosen politics over economic substance in allowing Bank of America, Citi Group, and Wells Fargo to exit the Tarp. Despite raising money the capital ratios of all three of these firms fell when the Treasury redeemed its preferred stock. The deleveraging continues and even fewer loans will be lent to consumers and small businesses in 2010, despite the pleas from the President. The Fed needs to look at the big picture and needs to quit waiting and start printing more money ASAP. Manufacturing activity is already slowing down in the U.S., Germany, and Japan. And Christmas sales at the retail level are looking to be weaker than expected. Come January the false dawn of economic revitalization will become self evident and the Fed’s hesitancy will cost it valuable points in confidence. If the Fed had moved today to up their quantitative easing program businesses may have had the confidence to keep workers on and perhaps even to attempt to expand. But because the Fed is blinking employers will blink too. Unfortunately the Obama Administration is not only blinking on job creation, they are blind.