Hedged.Biz

  • Disclaimer
  • About Us
  • Articles
  • Home
  • Articles
  • The Fed Cannot Not Raise Interest Rates This Year. It Has Backed Itself Into A Corner.
June 18, 2025

The Fed Cannot Not Raise Interest Rates This Year. It Has Backed Itself Into A Corner.

The Fed Cannot Not Raise Interest Rates This Year. It Has Backed Itself Into A Corner.

by Burnham Banks / Monday, 24 August 2015 | 12:15 am / Published in Articles
image_pdfimage_print

The fact that the Fed Funds effective rate is 15 bps and not 25 bps is reason enough not to raise rates. Central banks should refrain from moving rates about as they see fit. For one, their understanding of the economy is no better than anyone else’s. How can one make interest rate policy amid this much ignorance? For another, they tinker with the most important price of all, the price of money, which anchors all other relative prices.

Market interest rates, are telling us something already. Let them be our guide. The market is being distorted by Fed OMO and rate prognostications. The market doesn’t need to watch a Fed that is watching the economy. If the market focuses on the economy, the Fed can be absolved from that responsibility and go where all central banks should go absent crisis. The scrapheap.

On a more topical and practical note, the Fed has backed itself into a corner. If it raises rates, it does so into a US economy that isn’t exactly firing on all 8 cylinders. You don’t raise rates when inflation is this conspicuously absent, when you clutch at straws to find strength in labour markets. It is clear that the Fed wants to raise rates, is looking for an excuse to raise rates, because it telegraphed its intentions too soon, based on data that is now stale. If the Fed doesn’t raise rates, given current sentiment, the market will take it as a sign of weakness and asset values will tumble further. Since the Fed has been revealed to be supporting asset markets, it won’t do that. If it does raise rates, it will allay the market’s fears but it will slow the real economy. It will have to go very slowly indeed into the next rate hike. And it will have to provide more liquidity support to the market. It couldn’t possibly do a QE4, so a backdoor QE like the ECB’s LTRO may be one idea. But if it did do that, then the effective rate would not rise substantially to the target rate and the Fed risks losing the little credibility it has left.

So we have this situation where the Fed is damned if it does and damned if it doesn’t. In other words, the Fed is simply damned.

Ten Seconds Into The Future

“Hello. I’m Burnham Banks and I studied economics in the late 80s and early 90s. I’m still studying economics today and am still no wiser. This blog is a journal, a record of my thoughts and experiences. If we are destined to repeat our mistakes, we should at least repeat them faithfully. If not, then perhaps the past is a mischievous guide and we should try something new.”

Meta

  • Entries RSS

Featured Posts

  • Ten Seconds Into The Future 2025 06

  • Long short, hedging and market neutrality under unruly markets

  • Ten Seconds Never Felt So Long. 2025 Trade War.

  • Tariff Wars. The Best Response to Tariffs is to Cut One’s Own.

  • 2025 Geo Macro Scenario A

  • Fiction. Foundation CG. 2025 02

  • Thoughts from the Bar Stool. 2025 02

  • Trump. Vichy. Lebensraum.

  • FICTION. Ten Seconds Into The Future 2025

  • A Few Thoughts about AI

  • Ten Seconds into 2025. This is Thin…

  • Efficiency X Robustness and Other Tradeoffs

  • The Longevity Imperative

  • China Reflation Policy 2024

  • Three Big Themes, Investable or Not.

  • Fiction. Free Energy. Expropriation risk. Governance.

  • Fiction?: Matter and Interactions.

  • Blended Finance 1.0.1

  • Ten Second Into The Future 2024

  • Blended Finance 1.1

  • Environmental and Social Imperatives

  • Environment and Social Impact. Public Goods. Private Capital?

  • FICTION. Males are Alien Viruses. XY and XX.

  • Impact Investing 0.5

  • Ten Seconds Into The Future. 2023 Outlook.

Categories

  • Articles

Archives

  • RSS FEED

Copyright 2018 © Hedged.Biz All rights reserved

TOP