07 January 2008

Fed Policy Actions in Anticipation of Economic Recession

We've been studying and updating spreadsheets correlating market performance and various monetary aggregates and interest rates and spreads lately, in the hopes of gaining more understanding of what we think the Fed is doing. From time to time we like to share a chart because it might have some particular interest in and of itself to others.

Here is a chart of several of the primary monetary aggregates during the Greenspan - Bernanke chairmanships. We think they clearly demonstrate the Fed's anticipation of economic recessions which are also indicated according to the official NBER ruling. Keep in mind that economic weakness can be apparent long before the date on which the NBER formally declares (well after the fact) that the economy had entered a formal recession.

Although the chart is a bit dense with data, and not immediately and easily understood, it worth looking at it a bit, to get the idea of how the Fed reacts to an economic slowdown, and how the monetary aggregates react to the policy decisions by the FOMC Believe it or not this is a simplified version, not including interest rate spreads and stock market indices. Eyeballing charts like this is a first phase in our economic detective work, where we turn up suspects for more rigorous analysis using statistics and spreadsheets. But it does contain the big picture if you have the eye for it.

Does the Fed have a perfect control over the money supply and the economy? Certainly not! The analogy would be to that of a ship's captain. The ship travels in various conditions, and the captain does not personally propel the ship, does not maintain a perfect control sometimes to their dismay and that of the passengers, and may encounter previously unknown conditions. But in keeping with our analogy, we'd like to observe that both the captain and the Fed have quite a bit of influence over where the ship or the fiat money supply might be heading, and what routes they might take in getting there.

There is little doubt from our study that the Fed has seen a recession on the horizon, and is trying to balance the deflation of the housing bubble against an economic slowdown that becomes overly severe. Like a ship's captain, sometimes the tides and tradewinds are with you, and sometimes they are against you, and this will influence which actions you take to achieve your objectives. Let's wish Captain Bernanke well, as he steers us between the Scylla of Recession and the Charybdis of Currency Debasement.