Bernanke Asset Purchases Risk Unleashing 1970s Inflation Genie
October 26th, 2010WARNING: This is not a recommendation to buy, sell or hold any financial instrument.
Oil is already over $80. Either that USDX support I’ve been mentioning holds, or we could see oil back over $100 in a few weeks.
Is the “Recovery” going to run on $100+ oil?
*chortle*
Via: Bloomberg:
For the second time since he became chairman in 2006, Ben S. Bernanke is leading the Federal Reserve into uncharted monetary territory.
Bernanke next week is likely to preside over a decision to launch another round of large-scale asset purchases after deploying $1.7 trillion to pull the economy out of the financial crisis, comments from policy makers over the past week indicate. This time, with interest rates already near zero, the Fed will be aiming to increase the rate of inflation and reduce the cost of borrowing in real terms. The goal is to unlock consumer spending and jump-start an economy that’s growing too slowly to push unemployment lower.
Estimates for the ultimate size of the asset-purchase program range from $1 trillion at Bank of America-Merrill Lynch Global Research to $2 trillion at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., with economists at both firms agreeing the Fed will likely start by announcing $500 billion after the Nov. 2-3 meeting. The danger is that once the Fed kindles price increases, inflation will be difficult to control.
“By reducing real interest rates and trying to break the psychology of ‘Why spend today when I can buy goods cheaper tomorrow,’ they are hoping to drive growth that would be more commensurate with a pickup in employment,” said Dan Greenhaus, chief economic strategist at Miller Tabak & Co. in New York. “The risk is a late 1970s type of scenario where the inflation genie gets out of the bottle.”
The U.S. Treasury Department yesterday sold $10 billion of five-year Treasury Inflation Protected Securities at a negative yield for the first time at a U.S. debt auction as investors bet the Fed will be successful in sparking inflation. The securities drew a yield of negative 0.55 percent.
This is the best part, the plan is to “increase the rate of inflation and reduce the cost of borrowing in real terms. The goal is to unlock consumer spending…”
That’s right, inflation will reduce the cost of borrowing and make it necessary to use credit cards to buy Big Macs because your salary has flatlined, real wages are falling, and gas and home heating prices are up. So…borrow, borrow, borrow to put dinner on the table!