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Fed Dismisses Weak Data to Posture for Another Rate Hike

The Peter Schiff Show Podcast
The Peter Schiff Show Podcast
Episode • May 7, 2017 • 35m
SchiffReport recorded Saturday, May 6



* On Wednesday of this week, the Federal Reserve against a rate hike in May

* But based on their official statement, the market assigned a much higher probability

* To a rate hike coming in June

* In fact, following Friday's slightly better-than-expected Non-Farm Payroll report, the probability of a June rate hike is not near 100%

* In other words, the markets are certain that a quart-point hike is coming next month

* If the Federal Reserve does raise its rates by a quarter point, that will bring the floor of the official rate finally up to 1%

* The ceiling being 1.25%, so presumably the Fed will target a Fed funds rate somewhere between 1 - 1.25%

* This is still an exceptionally low interest rate indicating extreme monetary accommodation

* Remember, 1% is the absolute low that Alan Greenspan lowered interest rates to in the aftermath of the 2001 recession and the 9/11 terrorist attack

* That artificially low interest rate really provided the air for the housing bubble that resulted in the 2008 Financial Crisis

* So despite these rate hikes, the Fed monetary policy remains extremely accommodative,

* Just not as accommodative as they were before

* If you recall, the main reason I was certain that the Fed was not like to deliver these rate hikes

* Is because I took the Fed at its word that it was data dependent

* And I believed that the Fed would use weak data as an  opportunity or an excuse to not raise interest rates

* I was wrong about that, because the Federal Reserve has ignored all of the weakening economic data and has raised rates anyway

* It has raised them very slowly, but nonetheless, it has raised interest rates despite the fact that all the data they claim to depend on would not support that decision

* I thought for 2 reasons the Fed would not want to hike rates

* The first be to delay the onset of the next recession

* After all, raising rates into a weakening economy it would accelerate the onset of that recession

* I thought the Fed would always err on a delay

* But apparently, that is not a concern for the Fed

* One of the reasons this might be the case is because the Fed is concerned about having some ammunition to fight the next recession, rather than to postpone the onset

* Meaning that they want to get interest rates further above zero before the recession officially begins so that once it is here, they have more room to cut rates

* Another reason that the Fed has been more willing to raise rates has to do with the action in the U.S. stock market

* I thought the Fed would be reluctant to raise rates for fear of how higher rates might impact the stock market

* But it seems the stock market has found another prop

* It is no longer relying on cheap money; it now also relying on hope and optimism surrounding the election of Donald Trump

* And the idea that he is somehow going to "Make America Great Again"

* With deregulation, tax cuts and all sorts of economic stimulus


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The Peter Schiff Show Podcast • Fed Dismisses Weak Data to Posture for Another Rate Hike • Listen on Fountain