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Interest
Rate Manipulation
By
Steve Saville The
Speculative Investor
January
19, 2010
Below is an excerpt from a
commentary originally posted at www.speculative-investor.com
on 14th January, 2010.
What
the "risk free" interest rate should be and what it
actually is
The risk-free interest rate (the interest rate where the risk of
direct default is close to zero) should reflect the economy-wide
time preference, meaning that it should reflect the general desire
to save (postpone consumption) relative to the general desire to
consume. For example, a low interest rate would ideally indicate
that there was a relatively high level of savings and that
consumption was likely to be higher in the future than it is in the
present. As such, it would act as a valid signal for businessmen to
embark on long-term, capital-intensive projects in order to take
advantage of both the current low cost of credit and the expected
future rise in consumption.
Unfortunately, though, under the current system the interest rate
has almost nothing to do with the economy-wide time preference. As a
result: investing mistakes are made on a grand scale, the economy
lurches between boom and bust in oscillations of ever-increasing
amplitude, and real economic progress is slowed or stopped
altogether. All of this was well understood and explained by Ludwig
von Mises a century ago, but most of today's economists are
completely in the dark.
Rather than providing businessmen, entrepreneurs and other investors
with useful information regarding the overall level of savings, the
risk-free interest rate is now dominated by central bank policy and
inflation expectations. To be more specific, the short-term interest
rate is set by the central bank and the long-term interest rate is
determined by the combination of central bank manipulation and the
market's inflation expectations. Consequently, the interest rate
signal will now routinely be the OPPOSITE of what it would be in a
genuinely free market. For example, under the current system it is
common for the central bank to force the interest rate down to a low
level at a time when there is also a relatively low level of
savings, and for inflation expectations to force the interest rate
upward at a time when the economy-wide savings level is relatively
high.
We never cease to be amazed by the fact that people who are smart
enough to understand why a committee should never be given the power
to set the price of eggs believe that a committee should be given
the power to set the price of credit.
When will the Fed begin to hike the overnight interest rate?
It is clear that the Fed's plan is to keep its interest rate target
close to zero until there is a significant improvement in the US
employment situation. It's not likely that there will be any
improvement in the US employment situation over the next 12 months,
so does this mean that the Fed Funds rate will remain near zero for
at least another year?
Whether it does or not will largely be determined by inflation
expectations. As the "Austrians" have always known and as
the "Keynesians" discovered to their amazement during the
1970s, a high rate of unemployment will not prevent the prices of
goods and services from rising in response to rapid money-supply
growth. Rising prices lead to rising inflation expectations, and
once inflation expectations exceed a certain level it will become
necessary for the Fed to hike its targeted interest rate regardless
of what the employment situation happens to be at the time. The
reason is that if the Fed refuses to boost the overnight interest
rate in the face of rising inflation expectations, then long-term
interest rates -- including interest rates on adjustable-rate home
mortgages -- will begin to accelerate upward.
That is, in the absence of a meaningful increase in employment the
start of the Fed's next rate-hiking campaign will be determined by
inflation expectations. The question, then, is: how will we know
when inflation expectations have exceeded the level at which a Fed
rate hike will be deemed necessary? We suspect that the 'tipping
point' will be a decisive break below the support line (the base of
the multi-year topping formation) drawn on the following monthly
T-Bond chart.
Anticipation
of a Fed rate-hiking campaign could be an excuse for an
intermediate-term gold correction at some point, but there is almost
no chance that the Fed will become 'tight' enough to end gold's
long-term upward trend. In our opinion, an extension of gold's bull
market to at least 2013-2014 is 'baked into the cake' based on the
money-supply growth that has already occurred.
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