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August 13, 2007
Fed wins battle, war not over
Compared to Friday the news is that there isn't much news on the liquidity front. The Fed today injected only $2 billion. That effectively takes out nearly all of what they put in on Friday. There still is an extra $12 billion or so from a 14 day repo that took place last Thursday. But the upshot of all of this is that according to CNBC the fed funds rate is trading at or just a little higher than the target.
In other words, nothing too out of the ordinary, and the Fed might just be content to let the funds rate sit a little bit higher today. It's as if they are telling the market not to count their chickens before they are hatched when it comes to that rate cut the street has been calling for. Everybody and their brother is talking about moral hazard, and rightfully so. It is still my opinion that a rate cut is not desirable and would only be used if something like what happened on Friday turned into something close to a true global meltdown.
But it didn't. Mr. Bernanke won this one. He stared down the analysts calling for a rate cut and didn't blink. He did exactly what was required of him and the Fed. Simply put, the funds rate started trading above the target on Friday. So the Fed injected the liquidity to get it back down to the target. Full stop. Nice job.
As I watched CNBC this morning, I also began to get a fuller sense, as did anyone else who was listening carefully, of what was really happening. I heard one of the analysts say that the leverage in the hedge funds had dropped dramatically and that a significant amount of cash had been injected into those funds. That, of course, is exactly what needed to be done, and when you step back and think about it, everything that happened on Friday starts to make sense. A lot of people were in some pretty risky positions and got out of those positions and onto firmer ground. Of course, on Thursday and Friday, without knowing what was really going on it looked like more of a panic. If it is true that the leverage has decreased, then there should be less of a chance of something like that happening again, or worse.
Are the hedge funds and the other big financial firms hunkered down to weather any more fallout from subprime delinquencies? We can hope so. And if it is so, it is largely because of the Fed's injection of liquidity on Friday that made that process take place in a more orderly fashion. When the final story is written, that action may look pretty heroic. But like all good heroes, the Fed would say they were just doing what needed to be done.
Of course, hearing that July retail sales were up more than expected also helped everyone get off to a good start today. But I want to call your attention to some other news, which I think will be the most under-reported story of today.
China's inflation rate now stands at 5.6% with food prices rising around 15%. Why mention that in the context of what the Fed is doing? Because just as the Fed has to be on guard for deflationary pressures being transmitted internationally, they need to be on guard from inflationary risks overseas. Higher prices from China are already showing up on our shores. The Fed needs to make sure that we don't end up importing inflation from China.
Of course that was far from our minds on Friday, and rightfully so. However, with that danger passed, at least for now, we need to keep an eye on the other risks out there.
Posted by William Polley at August 13, 2007 10:23 AM
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Comments
I don't feel particularly gratified that the hedge fund community has been spared. Under the Fed's proud, parental gaze, the hedge funds have distorted, if not manipulated, every financial market.
The Fed has averted a melt down and the complete destruction of the middle class for the time being. Let's not forget that the Fed's supply side experiment is the root cause of this mess, just as it was under Reagan. Supply side expansion through debt creation simply doesn't work.
The other shoe is looming just off-shore. Supply side expansion through lopsided trade practices is also doomed to failure. The reason seems simple. The cost is placed squarely on the demand side consumer.
Posted by: zinc at August 14, 2007 09:45 PM