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Author Topic: The Fed is talking about letting the inflation rate rise above its 2% target.  (Read 317 times)
StonksStonksStonks (OP)
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August 19, 2020, 08:42:46 PM
 #1

https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2020-07-17/the-fed-is-setting-the-stage-for-a-major-policy-change


"Having learned a hard lesson in the last recovery — don’t tighten monetary policy too early"

"In practice, that means the Fed will not just emphasize actual inflation over forecasted inflation, but will also attempt to push the inflate rate above its 2% target. "

basically the article says the fed has some missed time to make up for since we had a period of lower than 2% inflation, well need say for example 3% inflation to make up for that lost infation.

money printer go brrrrrrrrrrrrr
The Sceptical Chymist
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August 20, 2020, 01:31:06 AM
 #2

I'm not exactly sure what the hell the article is saying, since it sounds like a bunch of economist gobbledygook to me.  What it doesn't sound like is that the Fed has any concrete plan to raise interest rates, and if they alluded to doing this in the article I'm pretty sure it would spook the market big time.  Investors/traders/speculators have been used to cheap money for so long that they're going to have to be weaned off of it slowly, like a methadone taper for a heroin addict.

I've said it a few times in recent posts: if interest rates get raised, watch out.  That will mean less margin trading (among many other things), which will have a negative effect on stock prices--and probably gold, silver, and bitcoin as well.  Unfortunately the Fed is going to have to raise rates eventually, but whether we're expecting it or not it's still going to come as quite a shock regardless.

And yeah, OP, that money printing press just continues to work overtime with no signs of a break in the action anywhere to be seen.

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philipma1957
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August 20, 2020, 01:43:31 AM
 #3

I'm not exactly sure what the hell the article is saying, since it sounds like a bunch of economist gobbledygook to me.  What it doesn't sound like is that the Fed has any concrete plan to raise interest rates, and if they alluded to doing this in the article I'm pretty sure it would spook the market big time.  Investors/traders/speculators have been used to cheap money for so long that they're going to have to be weaned off of it slowly, like a methadone taper for a heroin addict.

I've said it a few times in recent posts: if interest rates get raised, watch out.  That will mean less margin trading (among many other things), which will have a negative effect on stock prices--and probably gold, silver, and bitcoin as well.  Unfortunately the Fed is going to have to raise rates eventually, but whether we're expecting it or not it's still going to come as quite a shock regardless.

And yeah, OP, that money printing press just continues to work overtime with no signs of a break in the action anywhere to be seen.

Yep lots of bills big stacks of it.

It will be really interesting to see how much they pass the 2% level by.

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bitmover
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August 20, 2020, 02:28:15 AM
 #4

Governments like inflation, because it is good for them.

They do the most they can to generate more inflation: negative interest rates, money injection, and so on.

Governments make a lot of money from inflation, due to inflation tax.

For example, you pay capital gain tax over inflation. Your asset is 3% more valuable one year later? You will pay taxes over that 3%, even if only 1% is real valuation and 2% is just inflation.

Quote
https://www.quora.com/What-is-meant-by-inflation-tax-and-inflation-premium
Kaushal Salunkhe-Patole
Answered November 4, 2017
Inflation tax is a term which refers to the financial loss of value suffered by holders of cash and (if inflation is unexpected) fixed-rate bonds, as well those on fixed income (not indexed to inflation), due to the effects of inflation; or capital gains tax resulting from inflation.

Bitcoin is our way out of inflation taxes.

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August 20, 2020, 05:07:53 AM
 #5

This is probably not just making up for those times when the inflation was below 2%. This basis of this significant step appears to be oversimplified, seems to convey to the public that everything's pretty much under control and they are just shifting an approach or theory in the middle of a crisis, which in itself may be construed as somehow unsettling.

It makes me ask, is it really "letting the inflation rate rise above its 2% target?" Or is it that the inflation rate cannot be easily contained within that certain limit during this time of pandemic and it will probably shoot beyond that despite the efforts?

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August 20, 2020, 03:28:13 PM
 #6

November is a very short time for Trump, but since Trump was tapped as President, Trump has been doing quantitive tightening with the strategy to pull the dollar outside America, so the value and interest rate of the dollar would rise, because people and countries need a lot of dollars, and the dollar will dry up in markets outside America.

This strong dollar makes the price of goods that America imports cheap. Or we can see from the side of other countries, which depend on imports but have a strong national currency, so the raw materials for production will decrease. If America is too strong to attract its dollars, America will not lose, even though the protection will increase the price of imported goods from America, but the loss will be in the exporting country because we pay extra to America. For America, because the dollar has increased in value, the purchasing power of the American people remains and inflation is not very pronounced. If the exported goods are not absorbed by the United States or the exporting country benefits from decreasing due to the tariff war, then the exporting country will also suffer losses.

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exstasie
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August 20, 2020, 11:13:26 PM
 #7

basically the article says the fed has some missed time to make up for since we had a period of lower than 2% inflation, well need say for example 3% inflation to make up for that lost infation.

money printer go brrrrrrrrrrrrr

From their Keynesian standpoint, it makes perfect sense. These deflationary periods obviously kick inflation well below 2%. Why worry about slightly overshooting 2% on the upside if it could mitigate the risk of cutting the recovery short?

As far as money printing goes, I'm not sure it matters much. If the economy doesn't recover to 2% inflation (or takes longer to do so than expected) they will keep running their infinite QE program anyway. Money printing is just the norm now. It's not based on the actual money supply, it's based on the state of the markets.

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August 21, 2020, 09:53:09 AM
Last edit: August 21, 2020, 10:04:20 AM by fiulpro
 #8

https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2020-07-17/the-fed-is-setting-the-stage-for-a-major-policy-change


"Having learned a hard lesson in the last recovery — don’t tighten monetary policy too early"

"In practice, that means the Fed will not just emphasize actual inflation over forecasted inflation, but will also attempt to push the inflate rate above its 2% target. "

basically the article says the fed has some missed time to make up for since we had a period of lower than 2% inflation, well need say for example 3% inflation to make up for that lost infation.

money printer go brrrrrrrrrrrrr

Until and unless there is actually a straight statement from the Fed we cannot decide what the Government is planning and therefore the most we can do is to consider looking at the market from different perspectives , right now what am able to see is that this article does not prove that this is what they are going for , at the same time if Inflation rises , it would only benefit the large industries , the businesses , banks , the people will be unfortunately in a big problem which might even risk management of the country as a whole.

Quote
Why worry about slightly overshooting 2% on the upside if it could mitigate the risk of cutting the recovery short?


I do believe that it could affect the population below the Poverty line , which are already being affected due to COVID-19 , since they are not even registered at the same time healthcare and such is just a dream for most.

Therefore I do believe that even 1-2% excess inflation is dangerous , not for us but for the people who are going to be affected by it drastically.

At the same time , it is natural to worry about inflation with time , since most of the times it's going to increase with time but , if the feds are trying to increase it even to a small extent I do think they should think twice about their decision or actions.

I would like to end it with a quote from the author where he very nicely explained the problems in few lines:

Quote
Inflation is and has been a highly debated phenomenon in economics. ... Many economists, businessmen, and politicians maintain that moderate inflation levels are needed to drive consumption, assuming that higher levels of spending are crucial for economic growth.


Plus the reason I did use the word *Government* instead of the Fed is because they are integrated very strongly with each other and most of the times their actions do benefit both parties , its like a whole lot of things that we don't know about .
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August 21, 2020, 10:10:32 AM
 #9

I'm afraid they will not (or never) tighten the monetary policy even in the post-coronavirus era since belt-tightening is not something easy, especially if we deal with politics where the administration can get bad press from doing such activity. That said, everything will be fine if the next administration has the balls to raise interest rates, etc., or it will get spiraled out of control.

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August 21, 2020, 10:12:56 AM
 #10

Sure it will rise above 2% target with this amount of fresh printed money
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August 21, 2020, 02:27:28 PM
 #11

The point is the FED is probably going to change their inflation targeting from 2% (that's a level where their miserably failed, by the way) to an "average of 2%.
This means they will be happy with inflation overshooting 2% for prolonged periods of time, in order to rais the "average" inflation above 2%. This will provide even more space for bonds and stocks to surge, cancelling this "inflation scare" as temporary.
At the same time, higher inflation will help deflate the gargantuan amount of money we are putting on the market, i.e. debt piling up.

Can it work? Sure, like myself driving to Pikes Peak top drifting with a 800 hp car: I can make to the top, but it's an high risk at every turn, and only a brief moment of misjudgement can have disastrous consequences.
Don't worry, bitcoin fixes that.

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August 21, 2020, 03:21:50 PM
 #12

Everyone knows real inflation has been vastly higher for a long, long time. I have no idea why they bother claiming any figure at all. It doesn't bear any relation to the real world where it's doing real damage.
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August 21, 2020, 03:43:47 PM
 #13

At this point in time, what strategy does the feds have up on their sleeve that they haven't employed yet? Pretty sure they have tried every trick in the book to save an ailing economy, and have failed miserably within the last few years as shown by the current market trends. This time, those that suggested this play probably thought, "why not up the target inflation rate slip past 2%? What could possibly go wrong, right?"

I'm even skeptic as to whether the figures they are releasing to the public are even real.

Can it work? Sure, like myself driving to Pikes Peak top drifting with a 800 hp car: I can make to the top, but it's an high risk at every turn, and only a brief moment of misjudgement can have disastrous consequences.
Don't worry, bitcoin fixes that.

At least for them they have safety nets and other things that could hide their failure on handling things, but I like the reference.

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exstasie
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August 21, 2020, 07:46:48 PM
 #14

Everyone knows real inflation has been vastly higher for a long, long time. I have no idea why they bother claiming any figure at all. It doesn't bear any relation to the real world where it's doing real damage.

CPI has its purposes in this analysis since economic output is directly tied to consumer spending. How fast the prices of consumer goods and services rise tells us a lot about how far wages go in the current economy.

What it doesn't tell us about is savings. Investments like stocks, real estate, and BTC aren't tracked for inflation purposes. And that is definitely something we should be keeping track of in addition to CPI.

I'd like to see an inflation index covering investment assets, because a healthy analysis considers not just spenders, but savers as well.

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August 21, 2020, 08:19:06 PM
 #15

Everyone knows real inflation has been vastly higher for a long, long time. I have no idea why they bother claiming any figure at all. It doesn't bear any relation to the real world where it's doing real damage.

CPI has its purposes in this analysis since economic output is directly tied to consumer spending. How fast the prices of consumer goods and services rise tells us a lot about how far wages go in the current economy.

What it doesn't tell us about is savings. Investments like stocks, real estate, and BTC aren't tracked for inflation purposes. And that is definitely something we should be keeping track of in addition to CPI.

I'd like to see an inflation index covering investment assets, because a healthy analysis considers not just spenders, but savers as well.

An inflation index tracking savings wouldn't really be an inflation index since inflation is the rise of prices and savings has nothing to do with prices.  If the government gave everyone a million dollars and everyone put it in the bank and did nothing with it, there would be no inflation to record.  Eventually, savings make their way back into the economy, so the exclusion of savings is only temporary. When the savings start to make their way back into the economy, it will affect prices and inflation accordingly.

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August 21, 2020, 08:39:52 PM
 #16

Everyone knows real inflation has been vastly higher for a long, long time. I have no idea why they bother claiming any figure at all. It doesn't bear any relation to the real world where it's doing real damage.

CPI has its purposes in this analysis since economic output is directly tied to consumer spending. How fast the prices of consumer goods and services rise tells us a lot about how far wages go in the current economy.

What it doesn't tell us about is savings. Investments like stocks, real estate, and BTC aren't tracked for inflation purposes. And that is definitely something we should be keeping track of in addition to CPI.

I'd like to see an inflation index covering investment assets, because a healthy analysis considers not just spenders, but savers as well.

On the saving part, someone has already answered to you.
I think the most important part to be added to the CPI are investment goods, mainly education and health (or health insurance). Those two ballooning gosts have caused a massive disruption of the purchasing power of the American middle class.



https://kottke.org/19/02/cheap-tvs-and-exorbitant-education-modern-america-in-one-chart

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August 21, 2020, 09:44:37 PM
 #17

Everyone knows real inflation has been vastly higher for a long, long time. I have no idea why they bother claiming any figure at all. It doesn't bear any relation to the real world where it's doing real damage.

CPI has its purposes in this analysis since economic output is directly tied to consumer spending. How fast the prices of consumer goods and services rise tells us a lot about how far wages go in the current economy.

What it doesn't tell us about is savings. Investments like stocks, real estate, and BTC aren't tracked for inflation purposes. And that is definitely something we should be keeping track of in addition to CPI.

I'd like to see an inflation index covering investment assets, because a healthy analysis considers not just spenders, but savers as well.

An inflation index tracking savings wouldn't really be an inflation index since inflation is the rise of prices and savings has nothing to do with prices.  If the government gave everyone a million dollars and everyone put it in the bank and did nothing with it, there would be no inflation to record.  Eventually, savings make their way back into the economy, so the exclusion of savings is only temporary. When the savings start to make their way back into the economy, it will affect prices and inflation accordingly.

I'm talking about the distinction between dollar savings, and savings held in investment and store-of-value assets.

If you hold your savings in dollars and then after decades find that it can purchase only a small fraction of the real estate or gold that it once could, I think that's a very important measure.

In other words, CPI doesn't tell us how much you lose by keeping your savings in dollars. That's a metric everyone should be aware of.

I don't care to bicker about the definition of price inflation; we can apply another name to the metric if you like. But the phenomenon itself (money losing value vs. everything else) is exactly the same as inflation, and I think that's what gentlemand was referring to.

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August 21, 2020, 10:35:16 PM
 #18

Everyone knows real inflation has been vastly higher for a long, long time. I have no idea why they bother claiming any figure at all. It doesn't bear any relation to the real world where it's doing real damage.

CPI has its purposes in this analysis since economic output is directly tied to consumer spending. How fast the prices of consumer goods and services rise tells us a lot about how far wages go in the current economy.

What it doesn't tell us about is savings. Investments like stocks, real estate, and BTC aren't tracked for inflation purposes. And that is definitely something we should be keeping track of in addition to CPI.

I'd like to see an inflation index covering investment assets, because a healthy analysis considers not just spenders, but savers as well.

An inflation index tracking savings wouldn't really be an inflation index since inflation is the rise of prices and savings has nothing to do with prices.  If the government gave everyone a million dollars and everyone put it in the bank and did nothing with it, there would be no inflation to record.  Eventually, savings make their way back into the economy, so the exclusion of savings is only temporary. When the savings start to make their way back into the economy, it will affect prices and inflation accordingly.

If you hold your savings in dollars and then after decades find that it can purchase only a small fraction of the real estate or gold that it once could, I think that's a very important measure.

In other words, CPI doesn't tell us how much you lose by keeping your savings in dollars. That's a metric everyone should be aware of.


I guess this is the part I don't understand then, because this is exactly what the inflation rate tells you. Inflation is calculated in the base currency and measures price increases over time, so if inflation is 2% per year the value of USD is dropping 2% per year. It doesn't matter if your net worth is in physical dollars or not, everything in the economy is denominated in dollars so no matter what medium you're keeping your wealth in, inflation affects it all the same way because you transact in dollars.  It's just that a consequence of keeping wealth in a medium that is inflation resistant (e.g., gold) makes the "value" of the asset rise in USD as inflation causes USD to lose value.  If you buy gold at $100 and then it's worth $110, did the gold gain value or did the dollar lose value relative to gold?  They're one in the same. But the inflation rate is telling you what you're losing by holding dollars instead of assets that produce income or act as an inflation hedge.

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August 22, 2020, 05:36:17 AM
 #19

https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2020-07-17/the-fed-is-setting-the-stage-for-a-major-policy-change


"Having learned a hard lesson in the last recovery — don’t tighten monetary policy too early"

"In practice, that means the Fed will not just emphasize actual inflation over forecasted inflation, but will also attempt to push the inflate rate above its 2% target. "

basically the article says the fed has some missed time to make up for since we had a period of lower than 2% inflation, well need say for example 3% inflation to make up for that lost infation.

money printer go brrrrrrrrrrrrr

How the hell could more inflation solve the economic problems of the USA?
It would be nice if some banker,who is currently working at one of the Federal reserve banks tries to explain this nonsense.It is historically proven that the inflation creates more problems than solves.
Anyway,be ready for a 20K Bitcoin price after a few months.Thanks to the Federal Reserve System,not due to mass Bitcoin adoption. Grin

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August 22, 2020, 06:20:28 AM
 #20

"Letting" is a scary thing, that is why I like bitcoin so much, there is a thing called FED in USA that decides if inflation should go above 2% or not, they have the power to make it drop lower or make it go above, that is a power that is uncanny, we are talking about average price of things, not everything obviously but the average going up or down, and an organization has the power to decide on that for the whole country.

I am sorry but I like bitcoin because even if it goes up or down at least it is the people with the bitcoins that decide this, it is not some centralized organization that can say bitcoin price or the block rewards or basically anything, it is untouchable, people can make the decisions if they want to but not just one group of them, it is all of them.

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