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The segment below was written and distributed only to the media within an
hour of last week's Federal Reserve interest rate hike, with excerpts/themes
picked up by various national media. At the prompting of a colleague, I have
decided to post it here along with updated comments:
Tuesday, August 9th, 12:00pm, PDT-
The market, uncharacteristically, is typically correct in its expectations
of Federal Reserve interest rate actions; indeed, it is with this fact in mind
that many argue that the Fed merely follows the market with regard to setting
interest rate policy. Were there ever a time for the Fed to surprise the market,
however, that opportunity existed today - the Fed should have taken advantage
of a number of current economic conditions to hike by 50 basis points at Tuesday's
meeting.
I'm well aware that mainstream economists had been hoping for the opposite
- a signal that the end to the Fed's tightening campaign was near, but I disagree
with that sentiment based on the following factors:
-
With the recent rise in long-term rates (the Ten-year Treasury stands
at 4.4%), the yield curve had garnered enough of a spread to allow for
a .5% hike in the Fed Funds rate to 3.75%, a level it is all but certain
to reach in six weeks, anyway.
-
Only two months ago, market watchers spoke with near certainty about a
looming inversion of the yield curve, perhaps at the 3.5% level, yet long-term
interest rates have recently backed up on renewed inflation fears. The
recent spikes in oil, gold and even in the improvement in wage rates would
have given the Fed plenty of cover to say after today's meeting, "we needed
to act aggressively to contain inflationary pressures." And although a
50 basis point hike would have been negatively received, initially, it
soon after may actually have been viewed as a huge vote of confidence in
what the Fed believes to be the underlying strength of the U.S. economy,
a surprise to a world that still suspects our debt-dependent economy is
too fragile to risk any sudden jolts. Unfortunately, today's action may
do little to impact the recent movement in the price of oil, in particular,
thus any near-term economic weakness may be attributed to the painful impact
higher oil prices are having rather than the "normal" impact one would
expect from a more aggressive Fed tightening campaign.
-
Why an economic slowdown? The U.S. stock and bond markets are now overbought
and oversold, respectively. If reversals that would bring a simultaneous
stock market decline and bond market rally seem imminent, anyway, together
these would be taken as signs of a market that is worried again about looming
economic weakness, thus calling the sustainability of the Fed's tightening
bias into question and potentially leading it to halt its hikes sooner
than the 4%-range or above, which the market had recently come to expect.
If the market readjusts its Fed Funds expectations back down, that would
be a huge negative for the U.S. Dollar, whose rally has been largely supported
by the Fed's actions this year and which has started to act poorly of late...
the Greenback could have used a boost today.
-
Real Estate: if a housing bubble exists, which it surely must in at least
some markets, then it can be rightly said that the primary cause has been
the sloppy lending that has been taking place in the mortgage lending arena.
As of yet, aggressive lending practices haven't receded noticeably, which
means it may actually make sense for the Fed to specifically attempt to
flatten the yield curve; with rates still near generational lows, removing
the profitability/attractiveness of risky lending by erasing the spread
between short and long-term rates will have a much bigger impact than hoping
a move from 4% to 4.5% in the benchmark ten-year Treasury will do the trick.
Acting to more aggressively rais e the Fed Funds rate is not without risk
since an inverted yield curve (and recession) could still result. However,
if I'm reading things correctly and the market is poised in such a way that
we'll soon be worrying again about another "soft patch" or worse, anyway, then
the Fed missed an opportunity.
Short-term rates are inching higher from what were such extremely low levels
that the Dollar is still in need of support and the Fed Funds rate will need
to first get even higher if the Federal Reserve wants to consider rate cuts
as a "cure" for the next recession, whenever it should arrive. Therefore, when
economic conditions as well as the long end of the yield curve give the Fed
room to be more aggressive in raising rates, it needs to take advantage.
- end of excerpt -
The above release is now part of a full-length article, one that also contains
comments on gold and the Euro and is available at our website, www.deltaga.com.
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Chip Hanlon
President
Delta Global Advisors
800-485-1220
info@deltaga.com
www.deltaga.com
Currently the President of Delta
Global Advisors and the founder of Green
Faucet, Chip Hanlon is regularly featured in the national media for his
global economic viewpoints and is a contributing writer for Real Money, the
subscription service from TheStreet.com. Previously, Hanlon has served as
the C.O.O. at Euro Pacific Capital, as the President of Unfunds, Inc., and
as Vice President of Investments and Syndicate Manager with Sutro & Co.
Copyright © 2005-2009 Chip Hanlon
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