| <SPECIAL FEATURE>August 17, 1999 When Greenspan Talks, People Listen 
 by Louis Corrigan
 (TMFSeymor)
 
 Of all the manifestoes delivered at
 University of California-Berkeley over the
 years, Alan Greenspan's speech on
 September 4, 1998 may go down as the
 one that actually saved the world. With the
 financial markets melting down, our
 mighty morphin Federal Reserve chairman
 stepped to the podium and said, "Don't
 fear, the G-man is here." Actually, it was
 more like this: "Moreover, it's just not
 credible that the United States can remain
 an oasis of prosperity unaffected by a
 world that is experiencing greatly
 increased stress."
 
 Sure, that's pretty oblique for a manifesto.
 But to the Fed-watching cognoscenti, the
 brief policy statement, which Greenspan
 grafted onto an academic dissertation on
 the new economy, plainly signaled that
 Greenspan planned to cut the federal funds
 rate, the rate banks charge each other for
 overnight loans and which affect interest
 rates on business and consumer loans.
 
 "Everybody just went out of their minds,"
 exclaims David Jones, chief economist at
 Aubrey G. Lanston and a long-time Fed
 watcher. The Friday night speech set world
 markets afire and drove the Dow up 381
 points when U.S. markets reopened.
 Greenspan would go on to orchestrate three
 quarter point cuts in the fed funds rate -- on
 September 29, October 15, and November
 17. These moves lubricated credit markets
 sobered by liquidity and risk premiums,
 and thus rescued the bull from the bear's
 clutches.
 
 The Fed chairman can be even more
 transparent when he wants to be. In his
 testimony to the Joint Economic
 Committee of Congress on June 17, 1998,
 he spoke of the need for "modest
 preemptive actions" to head off "forces of
 imbalance before they threaten economic
 stability."
 
 The Fed aims to keep the economy
 growing nicely while keeping inflation in
 check by nudging up interest rates when it
 looks like price increases are outstripping
 productivity gains, or soon might.
 Greenspan's comments meant that when
 the Federal Open Market Committee
 (FOMC), the Fed's decision-making body,
 met in late June, it would almost surely
 raise the fed funds rate by a mere quarter
 point (25 basis points) to 5%. (It did.) And
 that meant the string of rate hikes that the
 bond market was predicting might not
 happen after all. The markets quickly
 rallied.
 fool.com
 
 Next -- Interpreting Greenspeak:
 Berry and Wessel
 Interpreting
 Greenspeak:
 Berry and Wessel
 
 by Louis Corrigan
 (TMFSeymor)
 
 The challenge for us, though, is that the
 G-man typically speaks a language
 grounded in suspicion. He rarely appears to
 say exactly what he means or to mean
 exactly what he says. Greenspeak is a
 master at the art of equivocation. On the
 one hand, his speeches read like a mystery
 wrapped inside an enigma and julienned
 into a Jamesian sentence which would put
 my mom to sleep. On the other hand, they
 give motivated deconstructionists plenty of
 room to hatch whatever interpretations
 they will.
 
 Such slipperiness owes something to the
 fact that he's taken an increasingly
 pragmatic stance toward monetary policy
 and wants most of all to preserve his
 options. Then again, since markets move
 on his after-dinner belches, who can blame
 him for being coy? In any case, there
 remains a market for skilled translators of
 Greenspeak -- or better yet, commentators
 who presumably have an ear not far from
 Citizen G's own lips when he first whispers
 "rate cut" or "rate hike."
 
 "There have been a number of journalists
 who seemed to be in the know for a
 one-time deal," observes Fed watcher Kim
 Rupert, senior economist at Standard &
 Poor's MMS. But today, when the Fed
 wants to leak something to the market,
 John Berry of The Washington Post (The
 Post) and David Wessel of the Wall
 Street Journal "seem to be the major
 sources on a consistent basis," she says.
 
 By popular consent, Greenspan's leading
 mouthpiece is Berry, who's been covering
 the Fed for The Post since 1979. "It
 appears that whenever the Fed wants
 information to get out, he's one of the ones
 that information goes to," says Richard
 Cripps, chief market strategist at Legg
 Mason. That's why Cripps eats up Berry
 with his cornflakes each morning. John
 Hague, managing director and portfolio
 manager at PIMCO, home to the world's
 largest bond fund, concurs. "The market
 tends to react to his articles as if he has
 special insight into the Fed," Hague says.
 
 Investors went into a tizzy in the spring of
 1998 at the prospect that Wessel had keys
 to the temple that even Berry didn't.
 Wessel's April 27 story carried this
 headline: "Fed Ponders Rate Boost in
 Months Ahead/With No Slowdown in
 Sight, Officials Opted to Drop 'Neutral'
 Stance in March." The leak of a shift in the
 Fed's bias toward tightening spooked the
 markets, sending the Dow down 147
 points. The idea that Wessel had scooped
 Berry had analysts puzzling over possible
 dissent within the FOMC. Were the
 inflation hawks trying to batter the markets
 while G wasn't looking?
 
 The next day, Berry confirmed Wessel's
 report of the Fed's shift, but he included
 this rejoinder: "Fed sources cautioned that
 the central bank's decision to 'lean' toward
 higher short-term rates doesn't necessarily
 mean higher rates are on the way soon.
 Though Fed policymakers agreed at the
 March meeting that the economy seemed
 to be overheating, subsequent reports have
 suggested a cooling -- easing those
 concerns."
 
 Jones says he chuckled at the sheer
 competition between the reporters. "Berry
 probably called up his contact at the Fed
 and said, 'Why are you giving this stuff to
 Wessel? Why didn't you give it to me?'"
 Other observers refer to the incident as a
 case of "sour Berry." Nonetheless, the
 market turned around and headed higher:
 Berry had spoken. Or was it G?
 
 "No one from the Fed called me," insists
 Berry, who speaks with the deliberateness
 of a man who's listened to too much
 Greenspan. "This is one of those cases
 where people read my things and say, 'Oh,
 somebody at the Fed wanted to get the
 word out and called Berry.' Well, no, they
 don't call me," he says. "I wish they did."
 But does he talk to G? "I won't comment
 on that because the chairman only gives
 off-the-record interviews." Naturally.
 
 Wessel hums the same tune. "Almost all
 stories that I've done on the Federal
 Reserve are described by outsiders as if
 they arrived in a sealed envelope with Alan
 Greenspan's return address," he says.
 "Well, I'm still waiting for that one. It just
 doesn't work that way." So he's never built
 a story around a leak? "I'm not sure I want
 to get absolute about this," he says warily.
 
 Greenspan does give periodic background
 interviews to a select few Fed reporters,
 including Berry and Wessel. It's also
 widely believed that Greenspan sometimes
 leaks a story to confirm the market's
 interpretation of his remarks or to correct a
 misperception. That's why some think the
 piece Berry penned on April 28, 1998, was
 initiated by Greenspan himself.
 
 However, a "Fed sources" attribution
 doesn't necessarily mean G himself.
 Reporters rely on high level Federal
 Reserve staffers, bank presidents, and
 governors -- all Fed sources. They also call
 on well-informed Fed watchers, from
 former FOMC members such as Lyle
 Gramley, Wayne Angell, and Lawrence
 Lindsay to Wall Street economists like
 Jones -- all "sources close to the Fed."
 
 That creates a hierarchy of Fed stories. "If
 it doesn't say 'according to Fed sources,'
 then no one pays attention," asserts Jim
 Bianco, president of Bianco Research.
 Without that tag line, investors assume an
 article offers just analyst commentary spun
 with the reporter's own sense of Fed
 reality. That can be useful but not like a
 bona fide leak.
 
 However, S&P's Rupert argues that the
 "sheer volume of 'Fed sources' stories and
 the number of times the market moved on
 them and guys got burned" means reporters
 just don't have the power they once did.
 Several people point to Steve Beckner of
 the wire service Market News as someone
 who once coined hot Fed news but has now
 lost some of his currency because his
 stories seem too often merely sensational
 rather than truly valuable.
 
 Next -- Opening Up the Temple
 
 
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