Friday, December 5, 2008

"we think the Fed will not have to raise rates until 2011 at the earliest. "

Across The Curve seems to see things differently than I do ( And, yes, that does scare me ):

"Fed Chairman Bernanke has signalled that unconventional policy options, including aggressive quantitative easing and yield curve manipulation, is about to intensify, and as such, we now expect the Fed to cut the Fed funds rate to zero percent at the 16 December meeting, giving it a freer hand to conduct aggressive balance sheet expansion. If we are right, the December statement may also signal that the Fed is prepared to keep short rates down for a considerable period. If we are wrong and the Fed cuts 50bp or 75bp instead, we then would still expect the funds rate to be cut to zero on 28 January 2009.

Based on our forecast of an 8.8% unemployment rate by 2010 (up from 8.0% previously), we think the Fed will not have to raise rates until 2011 at the earliest. This, together with the Fed making aggressive purchases of Treasuries and mortgage backed securities at the long end, is likely to drive 10-year Treasury note yields to 2.0%, eventually taking the 30-year mortgage rate to about 4.0%."

I'm a bit puzzled about how this relates to Bernanke's talk on Deflation, so I need to go back and look at it. I can see this as a short term strategy, but I'm not sure that it can work.

2 comments:

Free Market Blogger said...

Don,

Nice blog. I'm not sure of your background, but you seem to have a good grasp of economics. Might I suggest that you register your blog with Econolog (http://www.econolog.net/stats.php?area=blogs). It ranks economics blogs. Good luck.

Donald Pretari said...

Thank you for your comment. I very much appreciate it. I will do as you say. Cheers, and thanks again , Don

PS Feel free to tell me what you think.