Dennis: WSJ Editorial: How high Can Rates Go? I went long 5 days ago. I started picking around the rubble and building a portfolio,
TA
----------------------------------------------------- May 16, 2000 Editorial
How High Can Rates Go?
By Todd G. Buchholz, chairman of Victoria Capital, LLC, and author of "Market Shock: 9 Economic and Social Upheavals That Will Shake Your Financial Future -- and What to Do About Them" (HarperCollins, 1999).
Federal Reserve Board Chairman Alan Greenspan seems to think the stock market is too high, people are feeling too wealthy, and wages are starting to creep up. So he'll likely hike interest rates at the Federal Reserve meeting today.
But there's another way he could achieve his goals. Quit his job. If the chairman turned in his keys to the Fed men's room, the Dow Jones Industrial Average would dive 20% and interest rates on 10-year Treasury bonds would shoot up past 7.5%. We'd sure get a slowdown fast. But there are probably limits to the chairman's patriotism, despite his serving five presidents at the White House or the Fed over the past 30 years.
Paradoxical Moment
There's a serious point here. The chairman's credibility, stature and longevity are his enemies at this paradoxical moment. Americans have so much faith in Mr. Greenspan and the Federal Reserve Board that they are ignoring higher mortgage and auto loan rates. Families figure they will simply refinance at lower rates once Mr. Greenspan gets things back on track. Even foreigners trust him, driving up the dollar this year by about 9% against the euro, 7% against the British pound, and 6% against the yen.
That leaves Mr. Greenspan with a couple of choices. He could keep jacking up short-term rates again and again and again, until the Federal Funds rate hits, say, 7.5%. (It was 6% this morning.) Sooner or later, businesses and families would feel the pinch.
Trouble is, this is a recipe for a typical 20th-century recession. No doubt, Mr. Greenspan remembers the 1990 recession, which followed a rampage of rate hikes in 1988 and 1989 that propelled the Fed Funds rate to 9.75%. I served in the White House during that period and watched angry missives from Treasury Secretary Nicholas Brady blaze across my desk on their way to Mr. Greenspan's Fed office on C Street. I'm sure he doesn't want to end his career with a bitter deja vu.
Alternatively, he could just borrow a few pages from Muhammad Ali's playbook. For instance, the "rope-a-dope" strategy, in which Mr. Ali patiently let George Foreman pound himself into exhaustion in the hot Congo sun. The point here is that Mr. Greenspan should display similar poise. He should not panic and start flailing away at the U.S. consumer by punching up short-term rates a full percentage point in the next few months. The U.S. consumer is going to punch himself out without the Fed moving aggressively.
But neither should the Fed do nothing. Just like Mr. Ali floated like a butterfly and stung like a bee, the Fed might consider talking like a hawk but biting like a dove. After slugging the bond market today with a rate hike, the Fed should show patience. Give some tough-sounding, vigilant speeches this summer, and support a strong U.S. dollar, which helps battle inflation. The important thing is not to go crazy, throwing wild, windmill punches.
Remember, Ronald Reagan didn't actually have to drop bombs to get the Soviets to give up ground. But his words thundered like B-52 bombers. Likewise, Mr. Greenspan doesn't have to spark a recession in order to keep inflation tame. Of course, the chairman doesn't have Mr.Reagan's gift for communication. Listening to Mr. Greenspan is like trying to make out the garbled announcements of the conductor on the "A" train as it rumbles under Eighth Avenue in New York. Nonetheless, Mr. Greenspan's microphone could be more valuable than his Fed Funds button.
All of this raises a non-trivial question: Should we be losing sleep over creeping inflation? The answer is: not much. Despite bond traders panicking about wages, labor costs have inched up by just 0.7% since the first quarter of 1999. I believe that Mr. Greenspan can adopt the Ali shuffle precisely because the economy will be slowing and inflation will be peaking by the Fall.
Consumers ran amok in the first three months of the year for a few good, simple reasons. The Fed flooded the market with liquidity in fear of the Y2K phantom. The M1 measure of the money supply jumped 15% in December. Furthermore, those new IRS computers worked at a furious pace, mailing back $96 billion in tax refunds from January through March. Employees also took home fat bonuses in January, which they promptly spent. And consumers took advantage of post- Christmas discounts and did much of their holiday shopping closer to Groundhog Day than to Christmas. With shoppers leaving skid marks in the parking lots, is it any wonder that the Fed's data zoomed off the charts?
Each of these stimuli is fading as we head into the summer. In fact, on April 15 many were forced to stuff envelopes with checks addressed to the IRS. The Fed has pushed down the money supply this year. Add a very jittery equity market, and you have the makings of a tamer economy. April retail sales slipped 0.2%. Suddenly, with the Dow and Nasdaq dropping about 6% and 14%, respectively, this year, the wealth effect doesn't seem so strong.
Up until two months ago, would-be homebuyers engaged in bidding wars by drawing on their capital gains in the stock market. That weapon has lost a few megatons of power recently. Despite the lingering boom in housing, I suspect we will be seeing the real-estate, furniture and appliance sectors turn downward. Corporations, too, are feeling the drag. Those with double-A credit ratings are now paying 1 to 1.55 percentage points more for credit than the U.S. government.
And then there's the structural and technological revolutions that have ignited a vicious, unforgiving and anti-inflationary competition among vendors. Companies boosted their equipment investment by 24% in the first quarter, making up for a weak, Y2K-infected fourth quarter. That's good news, not bad. Almost every week another industry unveils an Internet auction site that will squeeze prices for everything from greasy crankshafts to fragrant tulips. I went online and bought my grandmother a $99 Internet appliance for Mother's Day. She'll never pay retail again. She might even buy my new book at a discount and cheat me out of a full royalty.
More Legroom
Even airlines, plagued by higher fuel prices, are charging less than they did last year, according to the Journal's leisure and business fare index. Not only that, but American Airlines is giving you more leg-room.
Are there pockets of pricing power? Of course, but they are pockets that don't matter much to most of us, such as Ferraris and lodges in Aspen. Many luxury prices haven't budged, as Mr. Greenspan should know. Three years ago, he married NBC television correspondent Andrea Mitchell at the Inn at Little Washington, one of the country's best and priciest lodges. The regal attendee list featured Barbara Walters, Henry Kissinger and Katharine Graham. The fixed price dinner menu at the Inn hasn't moved a dime over $128 since their wedding. |