Fed's Influence Wanes as Markets Take a Cue From Policies
Mohamed El-Erian
President @ Queens' College, Cambridge | Finance, Economics Expert
Welcome to a world in which the Federal Reserve and economic data no longer have much influence on the value and fluctuations of U.S. stocks, bonds and the dollar. It is President Donald Trump’s economic policies that are now in control of asset markets, through both the measures that are implemented domestically and the U.S.'s relationships with other countries.
On Wednesday, Josh Brown, the insightful and widely followed market observer, remarked in a Tweet: “There is a Fed meeting today, which will get less attention than the Pro Bowl.” He compared what once was the main focus of markets to the annual “all-stars” game in football, which struggles mightily to get much attention, let alone any respect. On Thursday, Bank of England Governor Mark Carney said central banks were coming to the end of their “15 minutes of fame.”
This is a new situation for institutions that, as most market participants would readily acknowledge, have been the main determinant of asset prices in recent times. Actual and anticipated Fed policies have played a critical role in repressing financial volatility and pushing asset prices higher. In the process, exceptional Fed interventions decoupled those two market outcomes from messy economic and political fundamentals. Data releases also had an impact on asset prices, though it was much more limited, and operated mostly through their implications for Fed policy.
Underlying this were three strongly held presumptions about the economic, policy and political environment for financial markets: The economy was stuck in a low-level growth equilibrium that was stable, even though it was frustratingly sluggish and insufficiently inclusive; that systemically important central banks (not only the Fed but also the Bank of England, Bank of Japan and European Central Bank) were willing and able to rely on effective unconventional monetary policy, regardless of the potential for collateral damage and unintended consequences; and that other policy tools were sidelined by a highly polarized Congress and the lack of single-party control of both the executive and legislative branches.
The November elections changed this, as has the approach taken by the Trump administration since it assumed office on Jan. 20.
By delivering Republican majorities in both houses of Congress and a president intent on moving quickly to shake things up (as he promised during his campaign), the elections have relegated Fed policies and data to the minor leagues among major market movers. And, at least for now, central bankers are likely to welcome this state of affairs, especially given the political pressure on their operational autonomy.
This week is a good illustration. The Fed policy announcement on Wednesday was largely a non-event for markets. Also, the week’s stronger-than-expected economic data, including for manufacturing and jobs, hardly caused a ripple.
By contrast, the White House has been a market mover. Over the last two weeks, the deregulatory signal associated with the executive order reviving the Keystone Pipeline pushed stocks higher, while the announcements associated with travel restrictions and a possible 20 percent tariff on Mexico pushed them lower. Interventionist-inclined deviations from long-standing practice on dollar commentary -- namely, away from limiting it to a Treasury secretary who reiterates the benefits of a “strong dollar” -- lessened the conviction of those trading currencies on the basis of traditional factors. And, early this week, supportive White House comments enabled a single sector of the S&P index (biotech) to avoid downward pressures that took all other sector lower.
The good news is that markets are evolving away from an artificial, and ultimately unsustainable, driver of prices and volatility (the Fed's purchases of assets, which don’t fundamentally alter the secular and structural sources of growth). They now are increasingly sensitive to more genuine drivers in the form of actual and potential measures that influence productivity, trade, corporate investment and widespread economic incentives. The less good news is that this transition comes with a considerable degree of uncertainty, including what is developing into a tense and epic tug of war between the prospects for orderly reflation and those for disorderly stagflation.
This post originally appeared on Bloomberg View.
Mohamed, what's your take on cryptocurrencies and its impact on monetary systems? If financial companies start using blockchains to create its own currency, what will stop nations start doing the same and have dual currency systems with no central oversight and control?
Owner, Founder and Chairman Emeritus, RJR GOLF
8 年Abolish the bastards at the Federal Reserve already.
Financial Planner
8 年The Fed's Influence Wanes? What would a 25 or 50bp rate increase do to equities in March? And while the trend is your friend, equities couldn't have things more wrong then they presently do. If equities are reacting to "policy", that's a more sure fire short then there ever has been because the DOW is up more than 7% in 3 months, while 2017 GDP is forecast to grow 1.9% and inflation is picking up to 2.5% at 'full-employment' while not a single policy of the current administration is even remotely close to impacting economics, seems like a stretch. While I'm all for healthcare and financial market regulatory reform, I'd like to see just how close expectations and reality actually come. Pardon me for being skeptical of Washington but this market has mispriced valuations, political risk, inflation and rate increase expectations handily.
Consultant at confidential
8 年Never made this private company.