Buried Treasure at the Federal Reserve?
Source: http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/USMoneyMorning/~3/332115964/Posted on Thursday, July 10th, 2008 | In Current Market News, Economics
By Keith Fitz-Gerald
Investment Director
Money Morning/The Money Map Report
Every market cycle has its genius.
Even a market cycle as wild and volatile as this one has been.
And the latest genius might be just what the U.S. Federal Reserve needs to restore order around here: She might even be able to bring credibility back to the global financial markets.
Elizabeth Duke goes by “Patsy.” And while the nickname may be soft, the person behind the moniker isn’t soft. In fact, we believe that Patsy Duke – a career commercial banker – is the only Federal Reserve insider that understands how the global money markets actually work.
As such, she might just be the next central bank chairman.
We say that because, unlike current Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and the rest of the Beltway Boys – all of them academic theoreticians, data experts, or policy wonks – Duke has real commercial banking experience.
A Real “Find” at the Federal Reserve
Over the last 32 years, Duke worked her way up from the teller’s window, where she started, to an executive vice president’s post at Wachovia Corp. (WB). Along the way, she also became the first woman to chair the American Bankers Association – no small feat, considering how much of an “Old Boy” industry banking has always been.
Duke actually understands the consequences – what will happen – when you hand out $37.5 billion in taxpayer-subsidized freebies a week like the Federal Reserve is doing right now. And as the only commercial banker on the Fed’s governing board, she’s literally the only one with a firm grasp on the key regulatory issues the central bank should be addressing.
We realize that whenever someone hears the word “regulatory,” there’s an almost-unstoppable urge to yawn, followed by the desire to surf the Web for last night’s West Coast baseball scores.
But don’t be so quick to forget that the seeds of the current global financial crisis were sown by the almost-complete breakdown of mortgage-lending standards and banking-industry oversight – some of which can be laid right at the feet of the arrogant theoreticians who thought they knew better and who viewed the borrowing public (read that to mean consumers like you and me) as merely a bunch of numbers.
In the interest of realism, let me say right now that for Patsy Duke to be given the Federal Reserve’s scepter, she’s clearly got a long line of hurdles to clear. But we’re hoping that she does.
As Money Morning readers know very well, I believe that Team Bernanke fishtailed badly as it tried to get up to speed on the subprime mortgage mess, turning what could have been a very clean race into the Global Garbage Grand Prix. And the central bank’s weak-dollar policies have the potential to hurt the U.S. economy for years to come.
The Financial Backdrop Facing the Fed
From a global perspective, fears of an ever-worsening contagion finally seem to be subsiding even if a weak housing market, a badly outdated regulatory system, and increasingly illiquid funds and still more write downs suggest the risk of a sharp economic pullback or even a recession are still extant. But those are the very types of insidious financial nightmares we’re hoping Duke’s influence and experience will help prevent.
None of this eradicates the inflationary pressures we’re all feeling right now.
But the chances are very good that Duke is the first Federal Reserve governor who understands, on a personal level, just how hard it is to make ends meet when the economy slows down, inflation takes hold, and investors get pinched.
Of course, none of this really matters unless the markets turn around. But when it comes to the Fed, the distinction of having a single, real-world executive included in its ranks will help it restore confidence, and perhaps even fix the financial markets before they get any worse.
Last 5 posts by Keith Fitz-Gerald
- Where to Find Big Profits in a Post-Crash World - November 5th, 2009
- Four Reasons Why Hyperinflation Hasn’t Hit the U.S. Economy…Yet - November 4th, 2009
- The Dethroning of the U.S. Dollar Will Happen Sooner Than You Think - October 27th, 2009
- XIAN, People's Republic of China - September 22nd, 2009
- Five Ways to Outsmart 31,179 Other Investors - September 10th, 2009
Buried Treasure, Current Market News, Economics, federal-reserve, Fitz Gerald, Genius, global economy, Investment Director, Investors Profit, Map, Money Moves, Seismic Shift
![]() About Keith Fitz-Gerald (http://moneymorning.com)
Keith Fitz-Gerald is a Contributing Editor to Money Morning, as well as Investment Director of the Money Map Report and editor of the New China Trader. He is also a seasoned market analyst known for his accuracy, perspective and insight. He is also a former professional trader and licensed CTA advising institutions and qualified individuals, and he specializes in non-directional trading. Fitz-Gerald started his first business and began investing the proceeds at age 15, but he officially launched his business career 19 years ago when he joined Wilshire Associates, the globally recognized financial consulting firm. He is currently Founder and Managing Member of Fitz-Gerald Research Publications LLC, an investment-research firm that publishes general investment research, commentary and analysis. Having discovered key financial relationships that allow the markets to be modeled using complex systems based on Chaos Theory, Fitz-Gerald has been recognized as both a true pioneer of the form and an expert at using non-linear theory for market prediction, risk management and portfolio construction. That makes him one of the few people in the world who works exclusively with non-linear theory to predict the markets and forecast economic and financial events. With his cutting-edge analysis strategies, Fitz-Gerald has actually called some of the key market events in recent history. When crude oil was trading at less than $20 a barrel, Fitz-Gerald predicted it would rocket to $50, $60 and even $70 a barrel - the record levels that crude oil has reached today. He was one of the only analysts who correctly predicted both the 2000 stock-market decline and its subsequent turnaround in 2003. In February 2007, during an appearance at the World Money Show in Orlando, he publicly predicted that China’s shares were in for a tumble: He notified his subscribers of his prediction a full four days before that country’s stock market plunged 9% in a single trading session. And most recently, in speeches and detailed articles that preceded the actual event by several months, Fitz-Gerald repeatedly warned of the credit crisis that’s only now roiling the global financial markets. He was recently named a founding member of The Kenos Circle, a Vienna, Austria-based think-tank that identifies long-term economic and financial trends using the Science of Complexity, which is better known as “Chaos Theory.” Fitz-Gerald holds a BS in Management and Finance from Skidmore College and an MS in International Finance - with a focus on Japanese Business Science - from Chaminade University. He and his family split their time between Portland, Oregon and Kyoto Japan. |



