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Bernanke's
Burn Notice: Why Now?
By
EWI
Elliott
Wave International
January
28, 2010
Like a spy who gets a burn notice, Federal
Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has suddenly lost his support.
Bernanke has gone from being Time magazine's
Man of the Year in 2009 to … what? A Fed chairman embroiled in a
controversial reconfirmation process before U.S. Congress. Why the
sudden turnaround in his fortunes?
Robert Prechter, president of the research
firm Elliott Wave International, has written about the history of
the Fed and its chairmen several times over the years, and his
research shows that their popularity rises and falls with social
mood, which is measured by the stock market. Here is a compilation
of excerpts from Prechter's monthly market letter, The Elliott
Wave Theorist, from 2005-2009 about the trouble he
sees brewing at the Fed.
Can
the Fed Stop Deflation? Robert Prechter answers this
all-important question in his Free Deflation Survival Guide. The
guide gives you a 60-page ebook that will help you understand
deflation and its effects on society; you'll even learn how to
survive and prosper in such an environment. Download
Your Free 60-Page Deflation eBook Here.
(November 2005) The Coming Change at
the Fed | Public figureheads have a way of representing
eras. This is certainly true of entertainment icons and
politicians. The history of Fed chairmanship implies a similar
tendency for changes of the guard to coincide with changes in
social mood and therefore stock prices and the economy. [The chart
below] depicts our social-mood meter—the DJIA—since the Fed's
creation in 1913, marked with the reigning chairmen according to a
list on the Fed's website.

The first chairman, Hamlin, presided over a
straight-up boom. As it ended, Harding took over and presided over
an inflationary period that accompanied a bear market, exiting
just as a new uptrend was developing. Crissinger took over at the
onset of the Roaring Twenties, and Young presided over the boom,
the peak and the rebound into 1930. Meyer took over just as
confidence was collapsing and left the office in early 1933 at the
exact bottom of the Great Depression. The next three chairmen
struggled through the choppy years of the 1940s. Then Martin
presided over virtually the entire advance from the early 1950s
through 1969, exiting just before the recession of 1970. Burns and
Miller presided over a bear market and exited as the new uptrend
was developing. Volcker, after weathering an inflation crisis,
presided over the explosive '80s. Greenspan has presided over the
manic '90s and the topping process. [Ben Bernanke] will have his
own era. Given the eras that have immediately preceded the coming
change in leadership, the odds are that this new environment will
be a bear market.
(June 2006) Economists are convinced that
the Fed can "fight" inflation or deflation by
manipulating interest rates. But for the most part, all the Fed
does is to follow price trends. When the markets fall and the
economy weakens, the price of money falls with them, so interest
rates go down. When the markets rise and the economy strengthens,
the price of money rises with them, so interest rates go up. The
Fed's rates fell along with markets and the economy from 2001 to
2003. They have risen along with markets and the economy since
then. Regardless of the Fed's promise to keep raising rates, you
can bet that the price of money will fall right along with the
markets and the economy. Pundits will say that the Fed is
"fighting" deflation, but it will simply be lowering its
prices in line with the others.
It is highly likely that the next eight
years or so will test the nearly universally accepted
theory—among bulls and bears alike—that the Fed can control
anything at all. The Great Depression made it look like a gang of
fools, as will the coming deflationary collapse. We have predicted
unequivocally that the new Fed chairman will go down as Hoover
did: the butt of all the blame, and if you are reading the
newspapers you can see that it's already started. "When
Bernanke Speaks, the Markets Freak" (San Jose Mercury News,
June 10, 2006); "Bernanke is being blamed for spooking Wall
Street" (USA Today, June 7, 2006); "Bernanke to blame
for volatility" (Globe and Mail, Canada, Jun 13, 2006). The
new chairman had a brief honeymoon (which we also predicted), but
it's already over.
By the way, I heard his commencement speech
at MIT last week, and in it he spoke eloquently of the value of
technology and free markets. But he also opined that economists
have successfully applied technology to macroeconomics. We believe
that the collective unconscious herding impulse cannot be tamed,
directed or managed. In our socionomic view, the Fed cannot
control the mood behind the markets, but rather, the mood behind
the markets controls how people judge the Fed. We'll ultimately
find out who's right.
Can
the Fed Stop Deflation? Robert Prechter answers this
all-important question in his Free Deflation Survival Guide. The
guide gives you a 60-page ebook that will help you understand
deflation and its effects on society; you'll even learn how to
survive and prosper in such an environment. Download
Your Free 60-Page Deflation eBook Here.
(December 2009) Bernanke's greatest
achievement was not the measly $1.25t. of debt that he arranged to
have the Fed monetize; it was convincing the government to shift
the burden of debt default from the speculators and creditors to
taxpayers.
(September 2009) Thanks to the Fed Chairman
and two Treasury Secretaries, profligate bankers have been cashing
checks off the Fed's and the Treasury's accounts, and the poor
savers and taxpayers who fund these institutions are unaware that
their personal bank accounts are being tapped by counterfeiters
and thieves.
That lack of awareness may soon change. Declining social mood is
fueling the drive to expose the Fed's secrets. [Ed. note:
Bloomberg News has sued the Fed under the Freedom of Information
Act; Congressmen Ron Paul, R-Texas, and Barney Frank, D-Mass., are
leading a charge to audit the Fed.] Exposing the Fed's secret
deals could lead to scandal and the collapse of major money-center
banks. But most important to our monetary outlook, it will serve
to curb the Fed's reflation efforts. As I have written many times,
deflation will win. Social mood is impulsive and cannot be
stopped. The downtrend will claim its victims by whatever measures
it must take to do so.
(August 2009) On July 26, in a speech in
Kansas City, MO, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke declared, "I was
not going to be the Federal Reserve chairman who presided over the
second Great Depression." (WSJ, 7/27) We think this
implication of a fait accompli is premature. Clearly, the Fed
Chairman and the majority of economists are of the opinion that
the worst of the financial crisis is past and that the Fed's
unprecedented lending has averted deflation and depression. But
wave 3 down in the stock market will dispel these illusions. Years
ago, we suggested that Chairman Greenspan quit if he wanted to
keep his lofty reputation. He didn't do it. Now Chairman Bernanke
should consider this option.
So will Bernanke serve a second term as Fed
chairman? The January 2010 Elliott Wave Financial Forecast
says, "Social mood is still too elevated to deny Bernanke
reappointment as head of the Fed. ... But rising political tension
confirms that his next term will be far more stressful than his
first."
Can
the Fed Stop Deflation? Robert Prechter answers this
all-important question in his Free Deflation Survival Guide. The
guide gives you a 60-page ebook that will help you understand
deflation and its effects on society; you'll even learn how to
survive and prosper in such an environment. Download
Your Free 60-Page Deflation eBook Here.
Robert Prechter, Chartered Market
Technician, is the founder and CEO of Elliott Wave International,
author of Wall Street best-sellers Conquer the Crash and Elliott
Wave Principle and editor of The Elliott Wave Theorist monthly
market letter since 1979.
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