This post The Federal Reserve Dilemma: No Good Choices appeared first on Daily Reckoning.
Beginning in December 2015, Janet Yellen put the Fed on a path to raise interest rates 0.25% every March, June, September and December, a tempo of 1% per year through 2019, until the Fed “normalizes” interest rates around 3%.
The only exception to this 1%-per-year tempo is when the Fed takes a “pause” in hiking rates because one part of its dual mandate of job creation and price stability is not being met. Yellen raised rates in a weak economy, and now Jay Powell has done the same.
I’ve warned repeatedly that the Fed is tightening into weakness. Why is it doing so?
I’ve said repeatedly but can’t say enough, is that the Fed is preparing for the next crisis. The evidence is clear that it takes 3% to 4% in rate cuts to pull the U.S. out of a recession. The Fed cannot cut rates even 3% when the fed funds rate is less than 2%.
So, the Fed is in a desperate race to raise rates before a recession arrives so they can cut rates to cure the recession.
How does balance sheet normalization fit in?
Having pushed the balance sheet to $4.5 trillion in the last crisis, the Fed needs to reduce the balance sheet now so they can expand it again up to $4.5 trillion in QE4 if necessary.
Reducing the balance sheet is a precautionary step in case a recession arrives before rates reach 3%. In that case, the Fed would cut rates as far as they could until rates hit zero, and then revert to QE. (The Fed has shown no inclination to use negative rates, and the evidence from Europe, Sweden and Japan is that negative rates don’t work anyway).
The Fed does not have an unlimited capacity to monetize debt. The constraint is not legal, but psychological. There is an invisible confidence boundary on the size of the Fed’s balance sheet. The Fed cannot cross this boundary without destroying confidence in the central bank and the dollar.
Whether that boundary is $5 trillion or $6 trillion is unknowable. A central bank will find out the hard way instantaneously when they cross it. At that point, it’s too late to regain trust.
In short, the Fed is tightening monetary conditions now so they can ease conditions in the next crisis without destroying confidence in the dollar.
The Fed’s conundrum is whether they can tighten monetary conditions now without causing the recession they are preparing to cure. The evidence of the past ten years shows the answer to that conundrum is “no.”
The likely outcomes and the Fed’s real choices are the following:
In one scenario, the double dose of tightening from rate hikes and QT slows the economy, deflates asset bubbles in stocks, strengthens the dollar, and imports deflation. As these trends become evident, disinflation could tip into mild deflation.
Job creation could dry up as employers rein in costs. A stock market correction will turn into a bear market with major indices dropping 30% or more from 2018 highs.
All of these trends would be exacerbated by a global slowdown due to the trade war, concerns about U.S. debt levels, and reduced immigration. A technical recession will ensue. This would not be the end of the world. But it would be the end of one of the longest expansions and longest bull markets in stocks ever.
The other scenario is a more complex process with a far more catastrophic outcome. In this scenario, the Fed repeats two historic blunders. The first blunder occurred in 1928 when the Fed tried to deflate an asset bubble in stocks. The second blunder was in 1937 when the Fed tightened policy too early during a period of prolonged weakness.
Until December 2017, the Fed rejected the idea that it could identify and deflate asset bubbles. This policy was based on the experience of 1928 when Fed efforts to deflate a stock bubble led to the stock market crash of October 1929 and the Great Depression.
The Fed’s preference was to let bubbles pop on their own and then clean up the mess with monetary ease if needed.
However, the popping of the mortgage bubble in 2007 was far more dangerous and the policy response far more radical that the Fed expected going into that episode.
Given the continued fragility of the financial system, the Fed began to re-think its clean-up policy and chose a more nuanced stance toward deflating bubbles.
This new view (really a reprise of the 1928 view) emerged in the minutes of the Federal Open Market Committee, the Fed’s rate policy arm, for November 1, 2017, and was echoed in the public remarks of Fed officials in the days following this FOMC meeting.
This newfound concern about asset bubbles played out in the FOMC’s decision to raise rates at their December 13, 2017 meeting despite continued worries about disinflation.
As if to validate the Fed’s new approach, U.S. stock markets soon suffered a sharp 11% correction during February 2 – 8, 2018; a mild preview of what happens when the Fed tries to deflate asset bubbles. The Fed’s attempted finesse in financial markets could well result in a market crash as bad or worse than 1929.
The impact of such a market crash will not be confined to the U.S. In fact, a stronger dollar resulting from tight monetary policy could precipitate a crisis in emerging markets dollar-denominated debt that transmutes into a global liquidity crisis through now well-known contagion channels.
The second Fed blunder was an effort to normalize rate policy in 1937 after eight years of ease during the worst of the Great Depression beginning in 1929. Today’s policy normalization is almost an exact replay.
Economic performance from 2007 to 2018 is best understood as a depression, not in the sense of continual declining GDP, but rather actual growth that is depressed relative to potential growth even without outright declines.
It is understandable that the Fed wishes to resume what it regards as normal monetary policy after a decade of abnormal …read more
From:: Daily Reckoning