Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Fed begins two-day meeting against weak backdrop

The Fed began its two-day meeting today and will conclude tomorrow against the backdrop of a floundering economic recovery and a jobless rate north of 9%.

Most analyst believe the Fed, which pledged to hold rates low until at least mid-2013 at the August meeting, will take another step toward easing in the hopes of jump-starting employment growth.

Promising to hold rates low for another two years appears to have done very little for the economy and many believe new steps will have just a limited impact.

The Street expects the Fed to extend the length of its bond portfolio, popularly called “Operation Twist,” by swapping shorter-term debt for longer-term debt.

Theoretically that might lower longer-term rates.

But how much this is already priced into the yield curve is unknown, and long-rates are already at historic lows – a 4% 30-year fixed rate mortgage. And potential home buyers aren’t jumping at the bait.

So it stands to reason that even lower rates would have just a muted impact on the economy.

Despite expectations, correctly calling what the Fed may do can be as dicey as calling the offensive play on third and goal at the five.

Will it be a run up the middle, sweep around the end, QB rollout and pass? Maybe it’s not that tricky but it’s possible the Fed could surprise.

A full-blown QE3 – always a possibility – could be implemented, but the track record for QE2 – higher inflation and anemic growth – suggests we’d get even less bang for the buck this time around.

The Fed could cut the rate it currently pays on excess reserves (near $1.6 trillion) from 25 basis points, as it hope to encourage lending.

However, lending institutions are already forgoing higher rates on credit cards, mortgages, auto loans and business loans by earning just a paltry 25 bp!

Cutting the rate by 10, 20 or the full 25 would provide little incentive to lend when many are shying away from new debt.

Further eliminating the rate on excess reserves could make it more difficult for the Fed to manage the fed funds rate.

Unfortunately for the millions who remain jobless, the Fed has few credible options left in its arsenal.

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