Today’s Fed Move or Lack of One is Much Ado About Nothing

In an effort to avoid a recession in 2008, the Federal Reserve cut the Federal Funds Rate by .25% today. The rate reduction was quickly rejected by Wall Street as evidenced by today’s 298 point fall. The stock market apparently was hoping for a .50% cut.

In my opinion, it’s much ado about nothing. Further it shows that the stock market and the Fed just don’t get it. This problem is much more than addressing an economic cycle.

Without a properly functioning debt securities market, there is no way to avoid a recession or grow the economy, which could very well lead us to a depression.

We have a severely broken debt market that may lead to the failure of our banking system. This is a far bigger issue than economic cycles. Jim over at the Depression of 2006 blog notes…

What is really happening at the Bernanke and Paulson level? The banking system could collapse. Unless they can keep the homeowner making payments the game is over. In order to keep the banks from dropping dead, the really bad stuff cannot be allowed to be marked to market.

With regard to our banking system, therein lies the issue. We don’t know how much bad paper they are hiding. A bomb could be dropped any day now. This can also be an explanation for why the banks are reluctant to lend to each other. They know the game and they know it’s possible they won’t be repaid.

We can weather economic cycles when equipped with a healthy, or at the very least functioning, banking system and debt market. Without them, I’m not so sure.

Besides fanniemae, freddiemac and the FHA, there isn’t much happening in the mortgage market and we’ve all heard the bad news on fannie and freddie. Millions of people can no longer access their wealth, which is disappearing daily, through mortgage lending. My product shelf has literally been decimated. It’s getting worse too, not better. The end of the mortgage crisis is a long ways off. In fact, we are in the very early stages.

Now you have the mortgage debacle spilling over into the revolving and consumer debt industries. Soon credit lines will be tapped out and delinquencies will reach the levels of the mortgage industry. Then these avenues for accessing credit will shut down too.

The reach of the credit crisis is global. It will negatively impact global economies like it’s affecting ours. With the US in recession, global economies won’t have the US economy to feed their growth. Further, their banking systems and debt markets will suffer in ways that parallel ours. For what it’s worth, as the contagion spreads globally, I see the dollar strengthening.

Today’s measure will do little in avoiding a recession in 2008. The problem is mechanical, not cyclical. The Fed will be ineffective using monetary policy to fix a mechanical economic breakdown . Quarters and half points matter little when there is no delivery system in place (the debt market and banking system) for the “discounted” money.