Fed chief under fire after no-taper decision

Agence France-Presse

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Economists and analysts blame Bernanke for stoking expectations of a stimulus cutback, say no-taper decision cost investors who bet hugely on the "taper"

BLASTED. Economists and analysts blast Bernanke amid stunned markets after no-taper decision. File photo by AFP

WASHINGTON, USA – Economists and market analysts on Thursday, September 19, blasted Federal Reserve chief Ben Bernanke after the Fed stunned markets with its unexpected decision to not cut its stimulus.

Bernanke came under fire for having stoked nearly unanimous expectations that the Fed would announce the “taper” of its $85 billion a month bond-buying program after its policy meeting Wednesday, September 20.

READ: Fed leaves stimulus unchanged at $85 billion, no taper

The decision cost investors who bet on a stimulus cutback hugely, though benefiting many with long positions in global stocks.

Many blamed Bernanke and fellow members of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) for having since May repeatedly suggested a September taper of the quantitative easing (QE) program.

University of Michigan economist Justin Wolfers called the surprise “the result of a needless miscommunication”.

“This whole taper debate is one that should never have happened,” he wrote.

After Bernanke first spoke of a stimulus cut in May and June, “taper-talk came to dominate the financial headlines, and a monetary meme was quickly born. The result… was that markets over-reacted,” he said.

“Despite Bernanke’s effort yesterday in the press conference to paint the FOMC decision as entirely consistent with earlier communication from the FOMC, it was not,” said Chris Low at FTN Financial.

“The Fed may have done the right thing for the economy… but the Fed’s communications credibility is shredded.”

Speaking after the FOMC announced its decision, Bernanke argued that all along he has stressed that any decision to taper had to be backed by data showing steady gains in the economy, especially “continued improvements in the labor market.”

“I think there’s no alternative in making monetary policy but to communicate as clearly as possible, and that’s what we try to do,” he said.

But Bernanke had not just pointed to a taper beginning late this year. The explicit details he provided fed the consensus that cuts were imminent.

He said that QE should be wound up when unemployment falls to 7%, with the expectation that that will happen by mid-2014.

READ: Bernanke says tapering stimulus ‘not a preset course’

FOMC members repeated those details in speeches, some emphasizing “as early as September.”

When the unemployment rate fell in August to 7.3%, not far from the threshold and with no caution from the Fed, the die was cast, as far as markets were concerned.

But the result was that interest rates shot up in expectation of tighter money conditions, apparently impacting economic activity, including home buying, something that Bernanke referred to when explaining the non-taper decision.

“The irony to all of this is that the backup in interest rates was due mainly to the chairman’s May 22 comments,” said economist Joseph LaVorgna of Deutsche Bank.

He questioned whether financial conditions have really tightened, but added: “If the Fed believes they did tighten, why did not the chairman or another Fed governor attempt to communicate this at some point” to prevent markets from getting ahead of policy?

“We are worried that when the time comes to taper, and someday tighten, the Fed will not have the courage to follow-through on its actions because market expectations will likely be well ahead of where the Fed is.”

Many analysts still praised the decision itself, saying persistent weaknesses in the economy, and with a turbulent battle over government budgeting and debt ahead, require continued stimulus.

“The economy has not pulled away from its near 2% trend growth rate of recent years,” said Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics.

And most still expect the Fed to embark on trimming the bond buys in the near future.

“For now, we maintain the view that the Fed will taper in December. But much depends on developments in Washington and in the housing market,” said Paul Edelstein, IHS Global Insight

But at the same time, they said markets will doubt more than before anything they hear from Fed policy makers.

“It will be hard now to take seriously Fed officials’ speeches and testimonies,” said Shepherdson.

“Yesterday’s decision confirms that the real modus operandi of the FOMC is to base its view on the state of the economy on the latest backward-looking data.” – Rappler.com

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