The psychology of diminishing
political and financial returns of Fed promises
by Charles Hugh Smith
Rather
than regurgitate the usual economic analysis of the Fed's policies, let's
hazard a psychoanalysis of the Fed. Given the primacy of psychological factors
in human behavior, it is astonishing how little attention is paid to the
psychology of the Fed's statements and policies.
Zero
Hedge offered just such a psychological insight (with a deliciously Freudian
twist) with this question: Does the Fed need to re-instill some discipline in
order to regain its omnipotence? Why (For The Fed) It Is All In The Foreplay
Exactly.
Subservience is a slippery slope, and if the Fed "caves in" to market
demands for a massive QE campaign, then where is the Fed's vaunted autonomy? It's gone. So what happens
in a few months when the market is once again in danger of rolling over? Will
the Fed cave in again and issue more QE? If it doesn't, the market reaction
will be violently negative, and the Fed will get blamed for the catastrophic
decline.
You
see the positive feedback loop of Fed subservience: the longer the Fed puts off
regaining autonomy, the more disruptive their refusal to obey the market will
be.
The
more they appear to meekly comply to the demands of the market, the greater the
pressure will be on them to continue giving the market what it now needs to
continue rising: QE.
The
only psychologically wise choice is to nip Fed subservience to the market in
the bud before it becomes even more destabilizing.
ZH's
reference to Fed omnipotence raises a critical question: what happens to the
Fed's power to manage market behavior with mere words if they launch QE3 and it
fails to move the market? Jawboning, promises and
threats are the primary tools of "perception management," and
Bernanke has masterfully manipulated perceptions with promises of future QE
"should the need arise" for the past 15 months.
If
he unleashes a tsunami of "free money" (QE3) and the market spikes up
and promptly rolls over into a decline, then his power will be destroyed in
three ways:
1. The promise/threat of more QE has been eviscerated; jawboning has lost its power and will only make the Fed chairman look silly and irrelevant.
2. QE itself will be revealed as the victim of diminishing returns: everyone will understand that QE4 will be a failure.
3. The Fed's omnipotence will be revealed as illusory.
Imagine
the addictive rush of being globally relevant. Now imagine losing that power. The Fed only remains relevant,
domestically and globally, as long as QE and its other
"unconventional" (and now utterly conventional) policies exert a
powerful magic on the market and economy. If these policies are perceived as
failures, the Fed's relevance vanishes--along with the addictive rush
experienced by its leaders.
The
Fed has foolishly backed itself into a corner. In essence, what Chairman
Bernanke and the other easy-money "doves" on the Board have said is
this: "We have the power to move the market and economy. We will use this
immense power when we feel the need to."
Now
the stock market is calling their bluff: "Oh, so you have this
great power, huh? Well, you better use it right now, or I'm going to throw a
fit and collapse!"
By
constantly talking up the success and power of his policies, Bernanke has
backed the Fed into a corner: either it proves its power is as potent as it has
constantly promised, or the power of the promises will fade.
Bernanke
has also backed the Fed into a corner by essentially promising that the Fed can
bail out the market and the economy while gridlocked Washington burns trillions. What Bernanke has said:
"Our policies have worked, and will continue to work magic."
What
he should have said: "We have done all we can. The Fed cannot solve fiscal
problems or structural problems in the economy. That is up to the President and
Congress, the elected leaders of the nation."
Having
foolishly made grandiose claims of supernatural powers, Bernanke now has to
deliver on those grandiose claims or be stripped of power.
Some
have suggested that Bernanke is frustrated by Washington's gridlock and
inaction on the "fiscal cliff," but he himself has played the enabler
of Washington's denial and addiction to borrowed trillions.
If
Bernanke shoots his QE wad here with the stock market at multi-year highs, what
will he do for an encore when the market falters? Once again Bernanke has
created a positive feedback loop: the more QE he pushes into the market at its
highs, the more vulnerable the market is to steep declines when the QE runs
out.
If
he promises a steady drip of QE cocaine, what happens when the market declines
anyway? Announcing any QE at market tops leaves fewer "surprises"
available at market bottoms. Bernanke will have expended his high-power ammo
and be facing the rampaging Bear with a dull Swiss Army knife he picked up in
Davos.
Is
Bernanke a stud or a wimp? Most of us never get close to the sort of power
Bernanke wields, and so we must explore the psychology of those who revel in
power, regardless of their public persona of calm modesty.
People
with power want to retain their power. Having backed himself into the corner in
two ways, Bernanke is extremely vulnerable politically. If he launches a
massive, sustained QE, he will rightly be perceived as acting solely to get
President Obama re-elected. (Wouldn't the Democrats accuse him of that were the
sitting president Republican? Of course they would, loudly and vehemently.)
If
he launches QE and the market declines because QE has already been priced in,
he will be perceived as a failed Fed chair and will eventually be asked to step
down, i.e. fired. That's not the legacy he desires, but he has backed himself
into a corner: having over-promised, he can only under-deliver.
Does
Ben Bernanke want to be perceived as a wimp who caves into the market's every
demand? Once again, he has backed himself into a corner by
touting the stock market's rise as evidence that his policies have succeeded.
Having tied his policies to the market, he now faces the possibility that a
market decline will be rightly viewed as a failure of his policies and
leadership.
Having
taken credit for the market's spectacular rise, he will now be held responsible
for its decline. Bernanke has made all the classic errors of the
grandiose ego: over-claiming credit and over-promising on the effectiveness of
his "magic."
Admitting
the Fed is not all-powerful would have diminished his perceived power, but it
would have increased his real power because he would be viewed as a
truth-teller. But in claiming a magic and power he does not have, he has set up
the classic pitfall of promising what cannot be delivered.
Diminishing
returns and unrealistic expectations make a volatile pairing. Having raised expectations to
the stratosphere even as the real-world returns on his policies have been
diminishing, Bernanke now faces an explosive gap between what he has promised
and what can actually be delivered.
There
is one last irony in Bernanke's constant promotion of his powers to unleash QE. Having talked up the market
for years with his promises/threats of QE, the market has priced in ever higher
doses of QE, in effect bidding expectations of QE's effectiveness to the sky.
Bernanke
has lost the power to surprise the market. Having raised expectations to the
sky, he must deliver something beyond the stratosphere to surprise the market.
But he doesn't have anything capable of matching the absurd expectations he's
inflated, never mind exceed them.
The
only surprise left is a negative one. Chairman Bernanke and his
fellow doves will soon realize the consequences of over-promising and
under-delivering. It works better the other way around, but now it's too late.
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