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Fed
Raises Discount Rate, Dollar Soars, Equity Futures Sink
By
Mike Shedlock Global
Economic Trend Analysis
February
19, 2010
The Fed has been talking about its "exit
strategy" for quite some time. Few believed he would pull the
trigger on anything soon. Yet, Bernanke, unexpectedly raised the
discount rate headed into options expiration.
Please consider the Federal
Reserve Discount Rate Announcement released after the market
close on February 18, 2010.
The Federal Reserve Board on Thursday announced
that in light of continued improvement in financial market
conditions it had unanimously approved several modifications to
the terms of its discount window lending programs.
Like the closure of a number of extraordinary credit programs
earlier this month, these changes are intended as a further
normalization of the Federal Reserve's lending facilities.
The changes to the discount window facilities include Board
approval of requests by the boards of directors of the 12 Federal
Reserve Banks to increase the primary credit rate (generally
referred to as the discount rate) from 1/2 percent to 3/4 percent.
This action is effective on February 19.
In addition, the Board announced that, effective on March 18, the
typical maximum maturity for primary credit loans will be
shortened to overnight. Finally, the Board announced that it had
raised the minimum bid rate for the Term Auction Facility (TAF) by
1/4 percentage point to 1/2 percent. The final TAF auction will be
on March 8, 2010. ....
The increase in the discount rate announced Thursday widens the
spread between the primary credit rate and the top of the FOMC's 0
to 1/4 percent target range for the federal funds rate to 1/2
percentage point. The increase in the spread and reduction in
maximum maturity will encourage depository institutions to rely on
private funding markets for short-term credit and
to use the Federal Reserve's primary credit facility only as a
backup source of funds. The Federal Reserve will assess over time
whether further increases in the spread are appropriate in view of
experience with the 1/2 percentage point spread.
Unsustainable
Course
That move comes on the heels of St. Louis Fed President Hoenig
saying policy was on an unsustainable course as noted in "Three
Paths Forward" - Kansas City Fed on Current U.S. Fiscal
Imbalance, Hyperinflation, Printing.
From Hoenig ...
No Short Cuts
Finally, there are no short-cuts. We currently must adjust from a
misallocation of resources. There is no way to avoid some
short-term pain in fixing the fundamentals in our economy. It is
inconvenient for the election cycle, and it is undeniably terrible
to have at least 10 percent of the labor force out of work. But
short cuts now mean people out of work again in only a few years
because we again try and avoid difficult adjustments. Outlining a
credible course for managing our debt for the future will
accelerate the restoration of confidence in our economy and
contribute importantly to sustainable capital investment and job
growth.
Conclusion
As I mentioned in the beginning, the fiscal projections for the
United States are so stunning that, one way or another, reform
will occur. Fiscal policy is on an unsustainable course. The U.S.
government must make adjustments in its spending and tax programs.
It is that simple. If pre-emptive corrective action is not taken
regarding the fiscal outlook, then the United States risks
precipitating its own next crisis. ...
The only difference between countries that experience a fiscal
crisis and those that don’t is the foresight to take corrective
action before circumstance and markets harshly impose it upon
them. In time, significant and permanent fiscal reforms must occur
in the United States. I much prefer this be done well before
anyone feels an irresistible impulse to knock on this central
bank’s door.
Treasuries
Decline After Announcement
Bloomberg reports Treasuries
Decline After Federal Reserve Raises Discount Rate
Treasuries declined after the Federal Reserve
raised the discount rate charged to banks for direct loans for the
first time in more than three years to encourage financial
institutions to rely less on the central bank for short-term
borrowing.
“This is all about how to start draining excess reserve and
implementing a tighter policy,” said Jay Mueller, who manages
about $3 billion of bonds at Wells Fargo Capital Management in
Milwaukee. “It’s not overtly hawkish, but not an indication of
perpetual dovishness or accommodation. This is a necessary step
before they could do the rest of the sequence of events.”
The rate increase is another step in the Fed’s gradual retreat
from its unprecedented actions to halt the deepest financial
crisis since the Great Depression. The central bank has provided
hundreds of billions of dollars in backstop credit to banks, bond
dealers, commercial paper borrowers and troubled financial
institutions such as American International Group Inc.
Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and policy makers “have reiterated
in every way that this does not signal a change in policy,” said
Aaron Kohli, an interest-rate strategist at primary dealer Royal
Bank of Scotland Group Plc in Stamford, Connecticut. “This is a
normalization of policy. They worked hard to remove the stigma
from the discount window, and now they are normalizing the
rate.”
Change In
Policy?
All the news articles on this hike are reiterating this is not a
change in policy. Say what you want, but this appears to be a change
in policy from doing nothing to tightening. At the very minimum this
is likely to change perceptions about the resolve of the Fed's
willingness to take its exit strategy seriously.
Krugman will no doubt be pulling his hair out, but Hoenig is
correct: the present course is not sustainable.
The shocking thing to me is the announcement coming on Thursday
before options expiration. This repeats the pattern (except in
reverse), of Fed moves to cut the discount rate and the Fed Funds
rate several time during options expiration week.
This is an important step, the first step always is. Yet it is only
the first step. So, let's not get too excited until there is some
follow through.
Slow Steps Expected
Bernanake is likely to go slowly, certainly with hikes.
Moreover, it will be relatively painless for Bernanke to start
draining excess reserves. The reason is excess reserves do not play
a role in bank lending as noted in Fictional
Reserve Lending And The Myth Of Excess Reserves.
The only reason excess reserves are a problem is they interfere with
the Fed's ability to tighten.
Because the Fed will drain those excess reserves before it tightens,
Bernanke can slow his exit strategy implementation as much as he
wants. In this regard, the market is likely to overreact, pricing in
rate hikes by Bernanke that will come later rather than sooner.
What Does It Mean?
If Bernanke follows through with additional tightening measures,
it's a signal that the Fed either believes the economy is
strengthening or the Fed simply does not care. The latter seems to
be the position of Hoenig.
Either way, this is very bullish for the dollar. I have the dollar
index at 81.18 right now, a new high for the move. Note that the
Euro cracked 1.35 to the downside, a new low for its move.
My target of 82.50 for the US dollar index set when the index was at
75 looks more than doable right now. The dollar index can get a lot
higher than that. If the Fed starts hiking before the EU, we could
see the Euro collapse to 1.15 or lower, with the dollar index
challenging 90 once again.
In response to the Fed's move, Gold and silver are taking a big hit,
yet one must respect the relative strength in gold vs. silver or
other commodities. Gold is close to all time highs while silver,
copper, and especially energy are nowhere close.
In the commodity sector, I still expect gold to outperform.
Important Takeaway
The most important takeaway from this is a potential change in the
market's perception of what the Fed is likely to do, and when it may
do it, in light of Bernanke's surprise move in options expiration
week.
In an equity market as overbought and overloved as this one is,
Bernanke's move heightens market risk. Ironically, the same holds
true even if there is no follow through from the Fed. The reason
being, lack of follow through will be an indication of deteriorating
economic fundamentals.
I think Bernanke has seriously misjudged the strength of this
recovery. The only alternative is the "we need to do this
regardless" mentality of Hoenig has won out. Either way, risk
is high and rising. There is little to like about equities in this
environment.
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