Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
Inflation Targeting Proposal an Exercise in Blazing Stupidity; Fed Fools Itself Posted: 15 Oct 2010 08:43 AM PDT Lower interest rates are not typically synonymous with rising inflation, but Bernanke foolishly thinks he can get that magic pair with the power of persuasion in conjunction with Quantitative Easing. Please consider Fed Considers Raising Inflation Expectations to Boost Economy Federal Reserve policy makers may want Americans to expect inflation to accelerate in the future so they spend more of their money now.Elegant Nonsense The idea that inflation expectations matter one iota except as pertains to hyperinflation is silly. Seriously, will you go out and buy appliances, food, autos, gasoline, or anything else just because you expect prices to go up? Even if you would, how much? You cannot store gasoline nor will you buy more food than a freezer or your pantry will hold. Then if you do, then what? Then if everyone else does too, demand down the road will crash, and prices will fall back as well. Perhaps you will buy an appliance, but only if you needed one anyway. Then after you buy it, you sure will not buy another. Thus, it does not take a lot of brainpower to see that at best (a very iffy at best), all targeting inflation expectations can possibly do is shift some marginal demand forward. However, if stores attempt to take advantage of the Fed's announcement and hike prices, the opposite could happen. With unemployment at 10% higher, higher prices might just as easily scare consumers away as opposed to goading them into spending. Inflation Targeting is an Exercise in Blazing Stupidity Stepping back for a second, it is imperative to understand that although the Fed can attempt to increase liquidity, it cannot determine where the liquidity goes, or if it goes anywhere at all. From that perspective, attempts by the Fed to increase prices, if they worked at all, would more likely than not affect goods with inelastic demand such as food and energy, and commodities via speculation. That is not at all what the Fed wants. Thus, the entire proposal is an excise in blazing stupidity. Consumers Need to Deleverage Consumers are tapped out in need of further deleveraging. Boomers are headed into retirement with insufficient savings. Small businesses are suffering from lack of demand, with rising input costs and lower prices received. Forcing prices higher now (assuming the Fed could do such a thing) would hurt demand. Yet the Fed is hell bent on trying, first by destructive Quantitative Easing strategies, now with absurd inflation targeting ideas. Hello Ben, This is Not 2004 This is not 2002-2004 where consumers were willing to mortgage their souls to buy a house. This is 2010 on the back end of housing and credit cycle busts. The one thing the Fed desperately needs to rise is home prices, but home prices are dead last on the list of things likely to rise should the Fed have any "success" in getting prices to rise. The last bubble is never reblown. Japan, The dotcom crash, and the housing bubble are prime examples of bubbles not reblown. After 10 years, only a handful of Nasdaq stocks made it back to new highs. Even solid companies like Cisco and Intel are down 60% or more. After 20 years, the Nikkei is more than 70% off its record high. Lower Prices Needed For price hikes to stick, demand must be real, not artificial. Otherwise, forcing prices higher by artificial means such as QE and inflation targeting will just serve to lower demand while increasing speculation and risk in commodities. Eventually, housing prices and other prices will fall low enough so that genuine demand picks up. When that happens, the economy will stage a recovery. In the meantime, and just as happened in Japan, the Fed's blazingly stupid policies are actually delaying the recovery. Fed Fools Itself I wrote that last night. Caroline Baum had similar thoughts this morning in Fed Wants to Hoodwink Public, Only Fools Itself: Caroline Baum If I were a central banker, I would be afraid.Fed Cannot Control Consumer Psychology The main problem Caroline describes is the Fed can provide liquidity, but not determine where it goes. And as I sated above, that liquidity is going into all the wrong things. Moreover, record junk bond sales, loans to Mexico, massive demand for emerging market debt do not even factor into the CPI. So while consumer prices stagnate outside of food, energy, and medical, Keynesian and Monetarist clowns call for still more liquidity. My only disagreement with Baum regards her conclusion: "Policy makers may end up fooling themselves that they can create expectations of a little more inflation without delivering a lot of the real thing. " The risk is not rising consumer prices, but more credit and asset bubbles just like the housing bubble that popped. We are awash in over capacity with little demand for goods and services. Consumers need to deleverage and so they are. They will continue to deleverage no matter what the Fed says or does. Models Don't Trump Reality We are in this mess in the first place because arrogant buffoons at the Fed, Greenspan and Bernanke included, remain in wonderland, where models trump reality. For more on this line of thinking, please see Drunken Horses and Drunken Horses' Asses in Academic Wonderland Economic Illiterates Trapped In Academic WonderlandBiggest Bubble Is Fed's Belief In Itself The Fed could not see asset bubbles form on numerous occasions. The Bernanke Fed is missing another set of asset bubbles right now in junk bonds, emerging market debt, and arguably commodities. The Fed believes it is all powerful and can control consumer demand and prices, in a global economy. It can't. We have countless bubbles to prove it. Another set of bubbles is forming now, and the buffoons cannot even see it. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Retail Sales Rise More Than Forecast; Once Again I Ask "Really?" Posted: 15 Oct 2010 08:27 AM PDT Bloomberg reports Retail Sales in U.S. Increased More Than Forecast Retail sales in the U.S. climbed more than forecast in September, easing concern consumer spending will weaken and endanger the recovery.Really?! Once again I am questioning the numbers. They do not fly in in relation to Gallup Poll Shows Discretionary Spending at All Time Low; Trends Support Double-Dip Theory Lower- and middle-income Americans' self-reported average daily spending in stores, restaurants, gas stations, and online averaged $48 per day during September -- down $6 from August and $16 from July. Consumer discretionary spending by these Americans making less than $90,000 a year is now at its lowest level since Gallup began daily tracking in January 2008, as the recession was just getting underway.See above link for more charts. Retail Sales Not Believable Calculated Risk has a nice chart in Retail Sales increase in September Retail sales may be at their best point in the year, but sales are certainly not within 3% of the all time high. If they were tax revenue collection would be exceeding all time highs given increases in sales taxes. Sales Tax Collections Down 5.9% June 2010 vs. June 2008 In spite of numerous sales tax hikes, tax collections are still 5.9% lower than two years ago. Moreover, June of 2008 was not the pre-recession peak. November of 2007 was the pre-recession peak. Bear in mind those statistics are as reported in Retail Sales Rise .4% from July - How Far to Pre-recession Levels? Where to from Here? reflective of the second quarter. See link for several charts. Unless consumers have gone on a tear in the third quarter (highly unlikely with renewed slowdown in housing as well as the recent Gallup survey above), these retail sales reports are simply not believable. What's clear is the methodology is flawed. By how much is the question. The way to figure out how much is to factor in all sales tax hikes and compare state sales tax collections. I will take another look at that as time permits. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
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