Evaluating the Fed: Pick Your Sources!
Source: http://oldprof.typepad.com/a_dash_of_insight/Posted on Thursday, August 14th, 2008 | In Market Commentary
At “A Dash” we have some strong viewpoints about the Fed. Prior articles have covered this point, including the following key points:
- Most of the big-time Street critics of the Fed (including plenty of those who are really smart, great traders, and offer timely advice) are overplaying their hand with Fed criticism.
- Wall Street guys need to learn that intelligent people can look at the same data and reach different conclusions. The fact that one has a lot of money to manage or gets a big paycheck does not imply omniscience.
- People confuse what they believe the Fed should do with what they expect the Fed to do. There is more money to be made by predicting the Fed, than by pontificating about their errors.
- Disparaging the actual credentials of others does not increase one’s status. The Internet and mass media create a playing field where many lowest common denominator arguments have mass appeal. That does not make them right.
- So-called academic credentials are unfairly disparaged. The members of the FOMC and the staff have extensive consulting experience in actual situations involving many countries. This experience is arguably more relevant than the perceptions of hedge fund managers, corporate CEO’s, and guys on a bond trading desk. At the very minimum, these latter sources all have a book or a company and a corresponding viewpoint. The FOMC members do not.
- There are different responsibilities. The Fed has a broad constituency. It is not the same as that of Wall Street managers.
- Fed critics often have a contradictory position. On the one hand, they evaluate Fed moves in terms of market effects. On the other hand, the criticize the Fed for “propping up stocks.”
Helping with the Confusion
There are some commentators who analyze Fed policy in very objective terms. They look at the impact on LIBOR, credit default spreads, getting liquidity where it is needed, and gaining stability in credit markets.
Others criticize the Fed in terms that are basically ad hominem. They see the FOMC and the hundreds of professional economists on staff as stupid, stooges, or whatever. It is fine to disagree about public policy directions. We live in a free speech, democratic environment. The investor needs to learn to discriminate between opinion and data.
Our Recommended Sources
There are several sources that every thoughtful investor and trader should read. These sources all deserve much more attention from those in the media.
- Macroblog, now added to our list of featured sources, is written by Dr. David Altig, now Vice-President and Research Director at the Atlanta Fed. We loved his commentary when he was at the Cleveland Fed and we are delighted to see him resuming his blog (with other contributors).
- Alea, also (belatedly) added to our featured sources, is written by jck, someone with obvious credit market expertise who unfailingly looks at actual indicators. Check out this article for an example of an objective assessment, based upon indicators.
- Bob McTeer’s blog, already on our featured list, but given little recognition by most.
In a future article, we plan to contrast these sources with the emotional commentary widely featured by mainstream media.
Getting Started
As a starting point, anyone who is serious about this subject should read the entire Altig article on the Fed actions during his one-year blogging hiatus. It is a valuable review. It is difficult to capture in a few quotations, but here is the main theme:
He goes through the chronology of actions:
Read it all. It is based upon data and provides a perspective that is little-appreciated on The Street.
It is important to consider differing perspectives, particularly those of the people charged with making public policy decisions.
Last 5 posts by Jeffrey Miller
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Atlanta Fed, Bob McTeer, Cleveland Fed, David Altig, Federal Reserve System, fomc, mainstream media, Market Commentary, mass media, wall street
![]() About Jeffrey Miller (http://www.oldprof.typepad.com)
Jeffrey A. Miller, Ph.D. is a former college professor with a hands-on, real world attitude. His quantitative modeling helped inform state and local officials in Wisconsin for more than a decade. A Public Policy analyst, he taught advanced research methods at the University of Wisconsin, and analyzed many issues related to state tax policy. In 1987 Jeff began work for market makers at the Chicago Board Options Exchange. His approach included finding anomalies in the standard option pricing models and developing new forecasting techniques. Merging these quantitative techniques with specific company analysis, Jeff also generated trading ideas from sell-side analyst reports. Through his years of experience in trading options, futures and equities, Jeff has come to be regarded as an expert in interpreting the effect of news on the markets and individual stocks. Jeff has served as a forensic expert in several cases involving such issues. He has also written a series of papers on investment management, describing both quantitative methods and those related to behavioral economics. |



