Opening Up the Temple
by Louis Corrigan (TMFSeymor)
This somewhat diminished role for the journalists is due, ironically, to the Fed's increased openness under the seemingly sphinx-like Greenspan. In early 1994, the agency started publicly announcing when the FOMC votes to change the target interest rate. Previously, investors had to watch the New York Fed's open market interventions to gauge a policy shift. Making sense of these interventions wasn't always easy. In November 1989, Wessel apparently mistook some normal seasonal adjustments to the money supply for a rate cut. "It took the Fed forever to forgive him," claims one observer.
The Fed is also much chattier than in the past. During the past two years, "there's been a Fed governor on the wires every other day" weighing in on the economy, says PIMCO's Hague. This "pattern of quotes" forms a mosaic that, in the light of macroeconomic data, reveals a good bit about the Fed's thinking. PIMCO's Hague says he pays particularly close attention when FOMC hawks (those inclined to raise interest rates at any sign of inflation) come out sounding dovish or vice versa.
In December, 1998, the Fed went even further by agreeing to immediately reveal any changes in its policy bias. At each FOMC meeting, the members indicate whether they are leaning toward raising rates, lowering rates, or remaining neutral at the next meeting. Previously, this bias was only made public after the following FOMC meeting, six to eight weeks later. So the quarter point hike in late June came with the news that the Fed had adopted a neutral bias, indicating that Greenspan & company were not necessarily going to raise rates again soon -- contrary to many predictions.
Ironically, such increased openness hasn't always clarified matters. There's been plenty of debate lately over whether FOMC officials even agree on what the neutral stance adopted in June actually meant. Indeed, stock and bond markets have swooned since Greenspan told Congress on July 22, that the Fed would "act promptly and forcefully... if new data suggest it is likely that the pace of cost and price increases will be picking up."
Yet, Greenspan added that the Fed's neutral stance meant that future moves depended on what upcoming economic data indicate about the economy and that the Fed "did not want to foster the impression that it was committed in short order to tighten further." In their articles on June 23, Wessel highlighted Greenspan's wait-and-see comments whereas Berry focused on the chairman's inflation concerns.
Because the new open door Fed extends to Greenspan's efforts to publicly communicate policy intentions to the capital markets ahead of time, Fed-watcher Jones argues that there are simply fewer meaningful Fed leaks. And the market does seem to be picking up Greenspan's signals. Bianco's research shows that the fed funds futures contract -- a market that most directly reflects traders' bets on interest rates -- had just a 50-50 chance of correctly predicting an FOMC decision during the period from 1988 to 1994. Yet, since 1994, the futures have been right about 85% of the time. "The market knows how to read Greenspan," he asserts. "That's why the business of Fed watching is in serious decline. "
Even so, G's rap for speaking in riddles if not rhyme still puts a premium on the listener's experience. "It's like looking at a series of paintings and one or two things change in each one," explains Wessel, sounding like a docent at a Monet exhibit. "Your eye is drawn to the things that change rather than to all the things that are in the background. But if you only looked at one painting, you wouldn't know what that one thing is. There's quite a bit of that in reading Greenspan's speeches." fool.com
Next -- He's Berry Good, But...
He's Berry Good, But...
by Louis Corrigan (TMFSeymor)
Berry earned his Ph.D. in Greenspeak in early April 1998, when he cut through the G-man's hemming and hawing to a gathering of the American Society of Newspaper Editors and focused on part of the Q&A where Greenspan suggested the stock market's ascent seemed justified by rising corporate earnings. As columnist and money manager James Cramer noted in Brill's Content, both Wessel and USA Today misinterpreted this frank admission of rational exuberance. The latter even carried the scare headline: "Greenspan leery of sky-high stocks." Only the Bloomberg Business Wire and Berry captured Greenspan's bullishness.
"I don't think it was as significant as Jim Cramer made out," says Wessel in an annoyed tone that implicitly acknowledges Cramer's long-running feud with Dow Jones (NYSE: DJ). "But if I had it to do all over again, I probably would have referred to the answer he gave because people seem acutely interested in everything Greenspan says about the stock market." Wessel admits that since he was watching the speech on TV, "I wasn't listening as closely as I should."
Nonetheless, Cramer clearly overstates the case when he asserts that "Berry's monopoly on interpreting the Fed is Microsoft-like." Berry may have a proprietary operating system, but it's both a little buggy and open to stiff competition.
For instance, Berry missed the hike in the Fed funds rate in April 1994, the last time the FOMC changed rates between regular meetings prior to the cut in October 1998. And like nearly everyone else, Berry failed to predict that October 1998 rate cut.
Also, on September 17, 1998, Berry "misinterpreted" something he was told following Greenspan's remarks to Congress and came out with a story that was just wrong: "The next meeting of Fed policymakers is scheduled for Sept. 29, but Greenspan's comments and those of numerous other central bank officials suggest that a rate cut at that meeting is unlikely." That meeting produced the first of the three rate cuts last fall.
What's more surprising is just how badly Berry blew the initial call on the most quotable nugget in the history of Greenspeak. On Thursday, December 5, 1996, Greenspan asked in his speech to the American Enterprise Institute, "How do we know when irrational exuberance has unduly escalated asset values...?" Like other reporters, Berry got an embargoed copy of the speech before the event. "I read it and thought, 'There's nothing new here,'" he confesses. So he didn't even bother to write a story for the next day's Post!
His editor called at dawn to say the Japanese market was tanking. Had Berry missed something? Berry contacted Joe Coyne, the Fed's chief public information officer, who was in the office early, preparing to travel with Greenspan by train to Philadelphia. Coyne conferred with two senior Fed staffers and told Berry he didn't think Greenspan's comments were directed at the U.S. market. Later that morning, Coyne called Berry from the train. As Berry explains, "He said he had spoken to the chairman and told him what he had told me. And the chairman said, 'Call him back.'" G had indeed intended to warn the market.
Berry describes the incident as "unique," a case of Greenspan intervening directly only because otherwise the Fed would have given him the wrong interpretation. Yet, the authoritative tone in Berry's article on December 7, 1996, is striking: "However, many investors and traders around the world misread the signal: Neither Greenspan nor other officials are about to raise rates." That sounds a lot like his article in April 1998 when Berry both confirmed and rebutted Wessel's story on a change in the FOMC's bias toward tightening. And that makes you wonder just how often those off-the-record conversations occur.
Then again, one could argue that Wessel totally scooped Berry on the irrational exuberance episode. On November 25, 1996, Wessel began a piece: "If you were Alan Greenspan, wouldn't you be worried about the soaring stock market?" While Wessel noted that the Fed was then avoiding any mention of "stock" and "market" in the same sentence, he added that "the Fed would welcome less exuberance on Wall Street." Greenspan is no plagiarist. The chairman had been working on the speech for a month. What did Wessel say about special envelopes in his mail? fool.com
Next -- Fed Schmed? Not Really
Fed Schmed? Not Really
by Louis Corrigan (TMFSeymor)
All the intrigue over leaks owes something to the fact that the Fed has a chummy relationship with favored reporters. These journalists attend Greenspan's annual Fourth of July party on the Fed's balcony overlooking the mall in Washington, D.C. They also trek to Jackson Hole, Wyoming, each August for an economic conference where Fed officials, corporate executives, and reporters pal around on the golf course.
James Padinha, an economist who writes a daily column for TheStreet.com, has spoofed this whole insider's world in a piece entitled "Greenspan and Me." Padinha conjured up a fantasy day of hanging out with G in Jackson Hole, chowing down at Billy's Giant Hamburgers, renting Showgirls, and chilling to the new Hole CD. Unfortunately, he didn't tell us whether G prefers Versace Courtney or grunge Courtney!
While it's safe to say that reporter Andrea Mitchell (Greenspan's wife), Berry, and even Wessel have heard more of Greenspan's sweet nothings than Padinha, the increasingly transparent Fed has actually increased the value of someone like Padinha who excels at analyzing and explaining the sheaf of obscure data Greenspan reportedly reads while regularly soaking in his tub like some modern day Marat. William Meehan, chief market analyst at Cantor Fitzgerald, admires Padinha's wit and the fact that he offers a "less biased point of view than you might get from many other economists that get paid by wire service brokerage houses."
Other pros find that the best source for the Fed is, well, the Fed itself. "Go to their website," recommends Jeff Applegate, chief investment strategist at Lehman Brothers. "Read what they're saying, read their speeches. I think that's the best source rather than reading somebody's take on what they're saying."
Fed schmed, others say. Jim Paulsen, chief investment strategist for Norwest Investment Management, calls the Fed "sexy stuff," but he thinks G is more a passenger than a driver. "Interest rates are being established by the bond market, and the Fed just follows, usually with a lag."
Maybe, but the markets still move on Fed news so traders are always looking for that special edge on G's thinking. Some bond traders key off of PIMCO guru Bill Gross both because, as Bianco says, "he has the power to make some of his forecasts self-fulfilling" and because traders think Gross has an inside track on Greenspan. PIMCO's Hague counters, "I don't think that's the case." He says traders like to know what PIMCO is doing simply so they can "get in front of the order flow," profiting from the impact PIMCO's outsized trades have on the market. Still, PIMCO was betting correctly on lower interest rates throughout 1998, even when many bond traders still feared a rate hike.
One surprise is that CNBC has become increasingly important in the Fed-watching world. First, there was the widely joked about "briefcase indicator": If G's briefcase bulges on days when the FOMC meets, a rate change is in the offing. This indicator had a world-beating 16-0 record before blowing the no-brainer call that the FOMC would stand pat on December 22, 1998. On a serious note, CNBC's Ron Insana appeared to scoop everybody on the surprise October 15, 1998 intermeeting rate cut, the one that gave investors the courage to pull back from the increasing panic and eventually rally stocks to new highs.
At midday on October 8, 1998, with the Dow down 240 points and investors fearing a freefall, Insana reported that former Fed governor Lyle Gramley, an advisor to Schwab's (NYSE: SCH) Washington Research Group, was talking to clients about the possibility of a relatively swift Fed rate cut via an intermeeting conference call. Up to that point, no one had seriously floated such an idea, at least not publicly. Though few observers think former governors such as Gramley have a direct line to the Fed's current decision-making, Hague and others say recent veterans have an edge because they "understand the psychology" of the FOMC members.
Apparently so. A week later, the FOMC cut rates via a conference call, making Gramley's prognostication absolutely right. Yet, the market's retest of the September 1, 1998 lows actually ended with Insana's report, which sparked an afternoon recovery on October 8 that made up nearly all the morning's losses. The Dow continued to rally with the fury of Berkeley radicals of yesteryear. In less than seven weeks, G-force winds had sent the Dow soaring 25% to a new high.
As long-term investors, Fools can afford to focus on businesses and ignore most of this Fed play-by-play analysis. Still, it's easy to see why traders like to be wired into G and the posse of informed observers he attracts. A lot of the market's short-term gyrations depend greatly on what Greenspan does about interest rates -- or, at least what the more widely watched commentators surmise he will do. fool.com |