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The Fed's Academic-Based Theories Are Creating A BRUTAL Economic Reality

December 28, 2015

One of the most frustrating aspects of today’s financial system is the fact that the Fed is being lead by lifelong academics with no real world banking or business experience.

Consider the cases of Ben Bernanke and Janet Yellen.

Neither of these individuals has ever created a job based on generating sales of any kind. Neither of them has ever had to make payroll. Neither of them has ever run a business. What are economic realities for business owners (e.g. operating costs, capital and profits) are just abstract concepts for Bernanke and Yellen.

Moreover, there is a particular problem with academic economists. That problem is that a major percentage of their “research” is total bunk made up in order to make tenure.

This is not our opinion… it is fact based on research published by the Fed itself.

According to a paper published by researchers from THE FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD, it was not possible to replicate even HALF of the results found in economics papers EVEN WITH THE ASSISTANCE OF THE INDIVIDUALS WHO WROTE THE PAPER.

Let’s repeat that: even with the help of those who claimed to have found the results, the results were not replicable. 

There is a word for a result that is not replicable. It’s imaginary.

This might go a long ways towards explaining how individuals like Ben Bernanke and Janet Yellen can continue to say with a straight face that they have a grip on the economy, when the results show that they are either completely lost or being dishonest.

Consider the Fed’s unemployment target for raising rates.

Back in 2012, the Fed claimed it would start to raise rates when unemployment fell to 6.5%. We hit that target in April 2014. The Fed didn’t raise rates for another 20 months.

One wonders, just what was the legitimacy of the Fed’s “target” for raising rates. How on earth can you make a target, then move the target for nearly two more years and claim the target was even remotely accurate?

More importantly, if the Fed’s economic models suggested raising rates when unemployment was 6.5% and the Fed didn’t raise rates until unemployment was at 5% (a full 20 months later)… just how accurate are these models?

We might be nitpicking here, but if the models in question are being used to steer the US economy, there is an awful lot at stake here.

Let’s take a look at what happens when the Fed’s theories connect with the real world.

The Fed claims it cut rates to ZERO to boost the economy. The theory here is that if capital becomes cheaper, corporates and consumers will spend more, creating more jobs.

Unfortunately this is not how the real world works. For consumers, excessive debt is deflationary in nature in that at some point you are so in debt that making your debt load more serviceable accomplishes next to nothing in terms of solvency/ spending power.

Moreover, ZIRP is deflationary in nature for savers and those who rely on interest income because it makes them concerned about future returns on their capital. As a result of this, they tend to hoard their cash, not spend it.

The only individuals who benefit from ZIRP are the very wealthy and corporates, because both can use their assets to leverage up. And this is precisely what has happened.

We are currently on track for our FOURTH straight RECORD year for corporate bond issuance.

Why is this bad?

Because A) it means corporations are going massively in debt and B) they are doing this NOT to expand operations (economic growth doesn’t warrant this) but to issue buybacks and dividends.

With rates at zero, executives are leveraging up to generate shareholder returns. This works great in the short-term, but there is hell to pay down the road. And unfortunately we’re there.

Today US corporates are more leveraged than at any other point in history, including the Tech Bubble.

H/T Societe General

This is what happens when the Fed’s academic-based nonsense collides with economic realities: perversions of capital that lead to massive bubbles and eventually even more massive crises.

The Fed fueled the Tech Bubble, which lead to the Tech Crash.

It then fueled the Housing Bubble, which lead to the Housing Crash and 2008.

And now it’s created an ever bigger bubble that that.

Which means…

We are heading for a crisis that will be exponentially worse than 2008. The global Central Banks have literally bet the financial system that their theories will work.  They haven’t. All they’ve done is set the stage for an even worse crisis in which entire countries will go bankrupt.

The situation is clear: the 2008 Crisis was the warm up. The next Crisis will be THE REAL Crisis. The Crisis in which Central Banking itself will fail.

Smart investors are preparing now.

 ********  

Graham Summers

Chief Market Strategist

Phoenix Capital Research

Graham Summers is Chief Market Strategist for Phoenix Capital Research, an independent investment research firm based in the Washington DC-metro area with clients in 56 countries around the world.

Graham’s clients include over 20,000 retail investors as well as strategists at some of the largest financial institutions in the world (Morgan Stanley, Merrill Lynch, Royal Bank of Scotland, UBS, and Raymond James to name a few). His views on business and investing has been featured in RollingStone magazine, The New York Post, CNN Money, Crain’s New York Business, the National Review, Thomson Reuters, the Glenn Beck Show and more.


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