Wikinvest Wire

Stagflation Alert!

Wednesday, March 21, 2007

The Federal Reserve Open Market Committee meeting concluded just a short time ago and, as widely expected, short-term interest rates were left unchanged. There were, however, a few interesting changes to the policy statement.

Actually, the changes from last time are more than just interesting - they really scream "stagflation". Here are the last two statements side-by-side.

Economic growth goes from "somewhat firmer" to "mixed" and "tentative signs of stabilization" in the nation's housing is now termed an "adjustment" that is "ongoing".

Oh Dear! Maybe that wasn't the bottom for housing.

The inflation data since the last meeting was probably the most disappointing development where back-to-back 0.3 and 0.2 monthly increases to the core rate have caused the inflation monster to pop its head back up and look around to see what kind of trouble it can cause.


What in January was characterized as having "improved modestly" has gone back to "somewhat elevated".

From "some inflation risks remain", a hawkish shift is now evident where the group's "predominant policy concern remains the risk that inflation will fail to moderate".


Oh Dear!

There is more work to do before the inflation monster is vanquished.

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UPDATE: 12:30 PM PST


Some currency traders are reacting to the news, though it's impossible to tell whether it's the weaker growth of higher inflation that has upset them so.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

The market looks happy, happy - but the reality is our dollar just went down, down...

Well, I didn't really want to go to Europe this summer anyway, right?

No wonder deficits don't matter - our dollar is becoming worthless.

Anonymous said...

The MSM thought this was dovish after dropping the words "additional firming". I'm not sure that was what was intended. Let's hope he doesn't talk to Maria again ;>

Tim said...

Yeah, I saw that. I didn't have my Fed decoder ring on when I made that comment - I thought that the addition of "predominant policy concern" offset the dropping of "additional firming". The equity markets certainly liked what they heard and that does explain the dive in the dollar.

It would be ironic if there's a dollar rout and he comes out and says he was misunderstood.

Anonymous said...

Dollar hegemony is our last remaining ace in the hole in the global economy. Unfortunately, a lone ace loses to a pair of deuces.

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