The Fed Will Hike To 4 Percent Come Hell Or High Water

Clarida Hell or High Water

Image of Richard Clarida from video below

Image of Richard Clarida from the video below

Credibility Problem and Disconnect

Richard Clarida on Squawk Box

Q: Is the fed data dependent or are they going to 4% come hell or high water. 

Clarida Response

  • I think they are going to 4% hell or high water if I had to out it into two boxes.
  • Inflation is way too high. Inflation was way too high last year. 
  • Until, inflation comes down, the Fed is really a single mandate central bank.
  • They are data dependent but the inflation data is too high. So I think they are going to at least 4%. 
  • I agree it's not a great place to be in. If it was just Putin, you are right. But unfortunately the economy is out of balance now. 

Clarida ducked hard questions on the Fed's role in this mess while admitting he got the inflation picture wrong.

Clarida also supported fiscal stimulus, the last round of which was the big problem. 

No one at the Fed saw this coming and they ridiculously kept kept QE going all the way to March of 2022.

So yes, the Fed has an enormous credibility problem and Powell understands that. 

As a direct consequence, the Fed is highly likely to make a mistake in the opposite direction. 

Meanwhile, the big spotlight appears to be on jobs and the unemployment rate. 

Strong Job Gains? Don't Count On It!

Full Time and Total Emploiyment vs Job Level 2022-08

 It's Increasingly Likely That Alleged Job Strength is a Mirage of Part Time Second Jobs

If Unemployment Levels Remain Low, How Far Can the Stock Market Decline?

Here's the question of the day: If Unemployment Levels Remain Low, How Far Can the Stock Market Decline?

The answer isn't pretty given The Fed is Openly Cheering the Stock Market Plunge Following Jackson Hole


More By This Author:

Investigating An Alleged "Real-Time Recession Indicator" That Lags Miserably
GDPNow Model For The Third Quarter Surges Then Immediately Dives, What's Happening?
ISM Says Service Sectors Strengthens, the S&P Says Sharpest Contraction Since 2020

Disclaimer: Click here to read the full disclaimer. 

How did you like this article? Let us know so we can better customize your reading experience.

Comments

Leave a comment to automatically be entered into our contest to win a free Echo Show.
Or Sign in with