A market hiccup with a message about meddling by the Fed
COMMENTARY
Which came first, this week's volatility in equities markets, or volatility in the minds of people who think government has the duty and competence to fine tune those markets? Whatever the answer, the more pressing question is: How high will be the cost of interest rates having been too low for too long? Events might be teaching a tutorial on the steep price of cheap money. Call this
Such money has been intermittent for decades: The real (inflation- adjusted) federal funds rate was negative about 40 percent of the time in the 1970s and in the first decade of this century. One purpose of the low rates was to send a flood of money into the increasingly frothy stock market in search of higher returns.
This would, the thinking was, produce a "wealth effect," making a fortunate minority feel even more flush, and more inclined to increase their consuming and investing, with benefits for all. For 20 years, from 1991 to 2011, Hoenig, an
Today, Hoenig, who is now with
Last week's events, Hoenig suggests, "began last fall" when the Fed "signaled" that rates "would soon be lowered," a signal it has repeated. "It slowed its planned reduction of its balance sheet, which remains above
A disappointing report, on the previous Friday, on just one month of hiring seems to have triggered Monday's stock sell-off. This ignited worried chatter about whether the Fed should have cut rates the week before, or might have to do so as an "emergency" measure before its scheduled meeting next month. This is not what panicky markets need: yet another government entity declaring yet another emergency to justify violating a prudential maxim: "Don't just do something, stand there."
In election years, or in years before such (these are the only kinds of years there are), the Fed is in an awkward position of its own making. In 2010, Fed Chair
Last year, the government went into a swivet when the nation's 17th largest bank,
Accurately reporting the over-caffeinated response in financial and other circles to Monday's market events, the lead story in Tuesday's Post began: "
A year before this week's market blip, on the first Monday of
When experiencing unsettling turbulence, some people pray, "Hail Mary, full of grace," etc. When markets have erratic episodes, Americans should say to themselves (and their government), "Markets go up, markets go down, get over it."



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