Focus on the Money, Not Rates

No one can say that the Federal Reserve can't do the impossible. At long last observers from across the political spectrum agree on one thing – that Jerome Powell and the Fed are well behind the inflation curve and have a lot of catching up to do. These days, that's virtually impossible.

Consumer prices are up 8.5% from a year ago, the largest increase since 1981. And while the Fed is talking tough and lifted the funds rate by a quarter percentage point in March, monetary policy remains very loose.

Chairman Powell has hinted recently at raising the target short-term rate by 50 basis points (a half percentage point) in early May. The market also expects another 50 bp in June and another 100 bp or more, combined, during the four meetings in the second half of the year.

As a result of these projected interest rate hikes, some fear a recession starting as early as this year. And these fears have put pressure on the stock market. The S&P 500 closed on Friday down more than 10% from the all-time high set back in early January.

But we think that for the time being these fears are overblown. Monetary policy is still very loose and would still be loose even if the Fed raised rates to 2.0% or 3.0% immediately.

Before the Financial Crisis in 2008-09, short-term interest rates were a good proxy for judging the stance of monetary policy. The Fed used a system of "reserve scarcity" and lower rates relative to economic fundamentals meant looser policy.