The Fed’s Dovish “Tapering” And The ECB

The Fed’s Dovish “Tapering” And The ECB

The Fed’s Dovish “Tapering” And The ECB

Recently, the Federal Reserve gave the most dovish “hawkish” statement ever. An apparent aggressive tapering that, in reality, means maintaining very low rates and massive repurchases for longer.

The Inflation Conundrum

Inflation has skyrocketed and aggressive monetary policy is the key factor in understanding it. I already explained it in my article “The Myth of Cost-Push Inflation”. The Federal Reserve has finally recognized this and has made a U-turn in its policy of maintaining stimulus despite inflationary pressures.

The Federal Reserve now expects core inflation to remain above 2.7% in 2022 (previously it expected 2.3%) and that it will be above 2% in 2023 and 2024. That means the CPI (Consumer Price Index) will probably remain above 3-4% in that period. Taking into account that it will close the year above 6%, we are talking about an accumulated inflation of more than 14% in three years, a great risk for the recovery, real wages, family savings and investment.

The Federal Reserve has at least acted, and will reduce its monthly sovereign bond purchases to $20 billion and $10 billion a month of mortgage-backed securities. In addition, it will accelerate the rate increases to three hikes in 2022, three in 2023 and two in 2024 to reach a 2.1% reference rate in 2024.

According to CNBC, the Fed will be buying $60 billion of bonds each month starting in January, half the level prior to the November taper and $30 billion less than it had been buying in December. The Fed was tapering by $15 billion a month in November, doubled that in December, then will accelerate the reduction further come 2022.

Now read again. The so-called “aggressive tapering” means monthly repurchases of $60 billion.

It is still a modest reduction for the magnitude and scope of an overly aggressive and even counterproductive stimulus program that has been active for too many years. No one can understand what the Federal Reserve is doing buying mortgage-linked assets with the real estate market at its record levels or raising rates to 2.1% with estimated core inflation above 2% during 2022-2024.

But the Federal Reserve is doing something more important and key: It is generating much greater demand for US dollars and absorbing savings from the world into the US, by making the safer investment (the US 10-year bond) more attractive to global investors.

The Federal Reserve takes the reins again and leaves the ECB with a changed pace and the wrong policy. Despite runaway inflation, the highest in three decades in the euro area, the ECB maintains its extremely aggressive monetary policy, negative rates and bond repurchases that account for 100% of the net issuance of the member states.

The ECB is Now Caught between a Rock and a Hard Place

The ECB cannot take decisive action as member states have become accustomed to an unprecedented monetization that has led the ECB’s balance sheet to soar to 81% of eurozone GDP compared to 37% of the Federal Reserve with respect to the US GDP.

If the ECB reduces its so-called expansionary policy, member states that continue to increase the structural deficit, will not be able to withstand the slightest rise in interest rates.

On the other hand, if the ECB maintains its huge asset purchase program and negative rates, the inflation tax and economic slowdown may condemn the eurozone to a stagflation that some eurozone countries have already experienced in the past.

The ECB is driving into the Japanization of Europe and now it Cannot Back Down

The Federal Reserve has once again exposed why the dollar is the world’s reserve currency and why no one should copy the Fed’s policy without the global demand for currency enjoyed by the US dollar. The Federal Reserve can allow itself a sharp change in monetary policy and see how the markets reward it and attract more demand for dollars. The euro does not have that luxury.

The ball is now in the roof of Lagarde and the ECB: Will they choose to continue inflating the bubble of debt from fiscally irresponsible member states, or will it choose to regain monetary sanity and avoid stagflation? I hope, for our sake, they choose the latter.

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Daniel Lacalle

Global Economy Expert

Daniel Lacalle is one the most influential economists in the world. He is Chief Economist at Tressis SV, Fund Manager at Adriza International Opportunities, Member of the advisory board of the Rafael del Pino foundation, Commissioner of the Community of Madrid in London, President of Instituto Mises Hispano and Professor at IE Business School, London School of Economics, IEB and UNED. Mr. Lacalle has presented and given keynote speeches at the most prestigious forums globally including the Federal Reserve in Houston, the Heritage Foundation in Washington, London School of EconomicsFunds Society Forum in Miami, World Economic ForumForecast Summit in Peru, Mining Show in Dubai, Our Crowd in Jerusalem, Nordea Investor Summit in Oslo, and many others. Mr Lacalle has more than 24 years of experience in the energy and finance sectors, including experience in North Africa, Latin America and the Middle East. He is currently a fund manager overseeing equities, bonds and commodities. He was voted Top 3 Generalist and Number 1 Pan-European Buyside Individual in Oil & Gas in Thomson Reuters’ Extel Survey in 2011, the leading survey among companies and financial institutions. He is also author of the best-selling books: “Life In The Financial Markets” (Wiley, 2014), translated to Portuguese and Spanish ; The Energy World Is Flat” (Wiley, 2014, with Diego Parrilla), translated to Portuguese and Chinese ; “Escape from the Central Bank Trap” (2017, BEP), translated to Spanish. Mr Lacalle also contributes at CNBCWorld Economic ForumEpoch TimesMises InstituteHedgeyeZero HedgeFocus Economics, Seeking Alpha, El EspañolThe Commentator, and The Wall Street Journal. He holds a PhD in Economics, CIIA financial analyst title, with a post graduate degree in IESE and a master’s degree in economic investigation (UCV).

   
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