Fed's Bullard: "We Don't See Recession Risk Likely In Near Term".... Just Like In August 2008
Moments ago, during an interview on Wharton Business Radio, St. Louis
Fed president James Bullard, who recently flipped from the Fed's biggest
hawk to its more vocal dove, said that he sees just one rate interest
in the next few years. Judging by the market action ever since the
February lows, he is merely confirming what the market already knows. He
also confirmed that the Fed will never hike rates at a time when even
one recent economic data point has printed negative, saying "the right
time to move rates is after good economic news."
More troubling
was his admission that the Fed is now helpless to fix America's biggest
problem, namely the ongoing decline in productivity by saying the Fed
"can't influence US productivity growth rate." He is sadly very wrong
here, because while the Fed can not influence productivity, it certainly
can influence what corporations allocate capital toward, and as we have
repeatedly shown, in recent years, virtually every dollar of free cash
flow generated by the S&P500 has gone not toward
productivity-boosting activities like spending on growth capex or
expanding R&D, but toward stock buybacks and dividends, instead. We
are confident not even Bullard would deny that pushing the stock market
higher in what is one slow-motion, marketwide LBO (or rather MBO) does
absolutely nothing for economic productivity; it does, however, do
miracles for trickle-up wealth, as both investors and management teams
(courtesy of their equity-linked compensation) have never been richer.
However, the most amusing soundbite was the following:
read more: http://universalknowledgeforum.com/index.php/topic,127.0.html
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