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Smith Faculty
Opinion Article
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January 30,
2008
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By Dr. Peter Morici, Professor of
International Business
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Fed Interest Rate Cuts Will Not Be Enough
Sovereign Wealth Funds a Key Stumbling Block
Today, the Federal Reserve cut the
federal funds rate a half point to 3.0
percent, as expected. It really had
little choice.
After cutting the same rate from 4.25
to 3.5 percent on January 22, the Fed
established expectations of another half
point cut today. In recent months, Ben
Bernanke has flip flopped so much
regarding his outlook for the economy
and need for further cuts, he really
could not afford to disappoint market
expectations again.
Fourth quarter GDP growth at 0.6
percent was a bit lower than economists
forecasted but no real surprise. The
economic news has been mostly bad since
Thanksgiving. Retail sales have
declined, industrial production and jobs
creation have stalled, and new home
sales and prices are dropping like
stones in a well. Global stock markets
are in a maelstrom, as equity analysts
add up the negative prospects of
businesses dependent on U.S. markets.
Sadly recent Fed moves and the
stimulus moving through Congress will
not likely be enough to avoid a serious
slowdown in growth or even a recession,
as defined by two quarters of negative
growth.
Effective monetary policy requires
sound financial institutions to transmit
cheaper money into stronger consumer
demand. Currently, banks can only write
mortgages for conforming Fannie Mae
loans, and for jumbos and less than
prime mortgages they can hold on their
portfolios. That is simply not enough to
get the economy out of its malaise.
Bond market investors will no longer
accept mortgage-backed securities
underwritten by large Wall Street banks
in the wake of the subprime debacle,
because those banks have found easy
capital from Sovereign Wealth Funds and
Middle East Royals. These investors have
not required the changes in business
practices that new capital usually
demands when refinancing failed
enterprises with strong marketing
infrastructure but soiled reputations
for product quality.
For decades, banks have resold
mortgages to bond investors to finance
the U.S. housing market but in recent
years, compensation structures and
executive expectations for lavish pay
have encouraged the creation of
over-engineered products, the selling
and reselling of the same loans, and
bizarre almost inexplicable bond rating
and insurance practices. The Sovereign
Wealth Funds and Middle East Royals have
not demanded changes in those practices,
and without those, insurance companies,
mutual funds and other private investors
will not again buy mortgage-backed
securities created by Wall Street’s
financial engineers.
This situation makes monetary policy
far less potent than needed at a time of
crisis. It is Ben Bernanke’s job to
recognize this problem and articulate to
Wall Street banks the needed changes in
their business practices. They could
comply voluntarily, or ultimately face
new regulations.
Sadly, Ben is not doing this part of
his job.
Peter Morici is a professor at the
University of Maryland School of
Business and former Chief Economist at
the U.S. International Trade Commission. ►More Faculty
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