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The Fed's new role: Sugar daddy

Posted Sep 16 2008, 06:15 PM by Andrew Horowitz
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Since when do we rely on government to intervene in every case of a failing business? If anyone wonders why we have such a mess on our hands, look no further than our boneheaded government that has obviously forgotten its way.  Think of this week's action within the financial markets as a result, not the cause of our problems.

AIG is in a battle for its very existence, Merrill has been absorbed and Lehman is bankrupt. And we're only part way through the week. What's next?

These days, many people are wondering what our government will do to stop the insanity. Yet, in a capitalistic society that relies on a free market system, we should only look to the government to guide and regulate against fraud and the manipulation of the system. Sometimes known as a laissez-faire philosophy, the government has a role, but it is not to be a business partner and a sugar daddy there to provide a backstop to the bad business practices of the banking system.

Surely, not everyone is in favor of bailouts. Reuters recently reported that when asked whether the government should provide a bridge loan or some other support for the company, which faces a liquidity crisis, Alabama Sen. Richard Shelby told reporters, "Absolutely not ... I hope that they will not bail out, or get a bridge loan, to AIG."

He added, "Where do you stop? Where do you draw the line?"

Now that the market sentiment lives and dies with the actions of the Fed, it appears that investors and companies are getting used to the idea that no matter how bad it gets, money is available, rate cuts will appear and the Treasury will help with some kind of handout. This is not the way in which we create a market that is considered healthy. By constraining market gains and losses to the whims and taxing power of the regulators, we will never have a stock market that will make or lose money. In effect, it becomes net-neutral as losses that are absorbed will become a positive on investor's P/L statements, but the tax payments to fund the losses will trickle down and become a negative item.

This week has cost the taxpayer upwards of $400 billion as we have seen the bailout of Fannie/Freddie and the Fed pushing $70 billion of temporary money into the the financial system to help prevent a seize up of the credit markets. Then, we heard the 2:15 announcement of the Fed, which was initially greeted with a thud, eventual put some life into a sagging market.  While most would have thought that a "no-change" policy would cause markets to collapse, odd as it seemed, they actually rallied.

The Federal Open Market Committee decided to keep its target for the federal funds rate at 2%. Below are the relevant segments of the official statement and inline comments/translation.

Strains in financial markets have increased significantly and labor markets have weakened further. Economic growth appears to have slowed recently, partly reflecting a softening of household spending. Tight credit conditions, the ongoing housing contraction, and some slowing in export growth are likely to weigh on economic growth over the next few quarters. Over time, the substantial easing of monetary policy, combined with ongoing measures to foster market liquidity, should help to promote moderate economic growth.

Translation: The Fed is here to act as a safety net if need be. Don't worry, that nasty inflation thing we spoke about in the last few meetings was a mistake. Go about your business.

Inflation has been high, spurred by the earlier increases in the prices of energy and some other commodities. The Committee expects inflation to moderate later this year and next year, but the inflation outlook remains highly uncertain."


Translation: We have conveyed a posture that helped to strengthen the dollar and it worked to weaken commodity prices. All we had to do was to mention that we were thinking about a rate increase and the dollar rallied. Now, go about your business as usual, we got your back.

The downside risks to growth and the upside risks to inflation are both of significant concern to the Committee. The Committee will monitor economic and financial developments carefully and will act as needed to promote sustainable economic growth and price stability.

Translation: Speak loudly and carry a big stick. The first order of business is to keep the financial markets from imploding. Then we will make sure that prices are stabilized.

This is all on the heels of  the August report that shows a dramatic increase to confidence and Tuesday's report that showed consumer prices saw a marginal decrease on an annual basis 5.5% in July to 5.4% in August. The report also found that the core inflation remained at 2.5% on a year-ago basis. As commodity prices have tumbled, the more recent data came in to show a slight decline on a month-to-month basis. It seems that inflation has left the house! Of course, this assumes that gasoline prices are not of consequence as they have not moved down appreciably.

If the Fed continues to play the Greenspan Put, we will eventually have an ineffective market as investors will have no real ability to analyze or project the outcomes of stocks. Businesses that are allowed to survive, even as they are insolvent and illiquid will only further corrupt the system.

Let the market work out its problems and likely, over time, the strongest will survive. If you don't believe me, just ask Mr. Darwin.

Related Reading:

The Crash of '08 Podcast (Andrew Horowitz Host)

Fed to Wall Street: Drop Dead

Analysts make dramatic forecast cuts

Why I am shorting MasterCard


 

Disclosure: Horowitz & Company managed account clients do not hold positions in securities mentioned as of the publish date.

Andrew Horowitz is a money manager and the founder of Horowitz & Company. He is also the author of the bestselling book, The Disciplined Investor . Check out his latest investment idea or listen in as he hosts, The Disciplined Investor Podcast.

Comments

 

Do the feds care that I have been out of work since March and cannot find a job, tried to get help from the government and I make too much money on UNEMPLOYMENT......in the meantime I have to hear about the feds bailing out companies using more of our tax money....what gives the CEO's and Board of Directors of these companies the right to employment when they are destroying our economy and now we are left paying for their mistakes......THANK GOD I have my faith to rely on during these very uncertain times......

Keep in mind that these multi million dollar bailouts INCLUDE multi million dollar severance packages for the top CEO's! Why should our tax dollars be used to help failing loan companies who have leeched off of (sucked the life blood out of) so many financially struggling Americans over the past decades by charging outragous interest rates - and now they want help ipsofacto from the same pockets that they've been stealing from! If our present legislators refuse to stop this madness, we need to replace them with legislators who actually have a backbone - willing to say ENOUGH IS ENOUGH!

I can't believe the government's statement that AIG is too big to fall.  Why is Bank of America allowed to get so big and take over everything? (i.e. Merrill Lynch).  Will taxpayers soon own Bank of America???

The problem with your assertion is that if the government let these giants of capitalism fail, then the whole paradigm that surrounds the very foundations of capitalism would be badly shaken. Banks are not just another business, they are the trustees in which capitalism functions, the place where most of us put our money to protect it, to make it grow even, to put it away for a rainy day, and so on.

If millions of Americans lose all that just because we let the bank's bad practices bring it into bankruptcy, the real victims are the depositors that believes they had their money in a safer place than under their mattress.

That is fundamentally the reason why the government has not other choice but to intervene, as the ensuing chaos and economic downturn would be deeper and faster than the slow and relatively invisible pain for just tackling more debt to a society that is deeply in bad as it is. Another 100 Billion to the national debt is not much more than adding another the purchase of another burger to your near-maxed-out credit card. At the end you just have to pay another few cents over the limit and you are safe for another month. That is far better than not being able to eat, and that's how it works, however insane that may be over the long term.

this is disgusting, everytime big business gets in financial problems, the government should bail them out. ceos making  million, every year. this countries financial greed , and greed in general , is creating all of this, i think we should close all the banks in this country and just have one called UNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK , with this motto IF YOU NEED IT WE HAVE IT, we bail out airlines and they are still in trouble, laying off thousands, if i was in financial trouble the government sure in hell would not help me,  this is so wrong , the government takes enough from me every week, it is only going to get worse for all off us. in the long run. the problem politicians, do not want to see thier investment fad away. why they approve these loans to some and not to others, gee 85 billion dollars , would help the elderly and others who do not have or ca not  afford health care, but , the government will tell you, we do not have the money .  just like enron, abuse , i think these big companies should all be investigated. for failure to protect the working mans retirement

Kaweeka - I understand that side of the coin as well, but at this point, isn't this just putting a band-aid on a ruptured artery? And if the fed is bailing out these private interests, shouldn't the fed have part ownership of them? ie. Fed sitting in on their Board of Directors, etc.

The Federal Reserve is not a government agency. The Federal Reserve is made up of powerful private bankers who illegally took controll of our money in 1913.  Turn off your television and do some home work.  Therefore, the goverment is not bailing AIG out.  AIG is one of the most corrupt corporations of all time recieving a hand out from their partners in crime, "The Fed."  Where do you think your illegal income tax goes to.  It definetly does not pay for repaving roads.  WAKE UP!!!!!  

This is so concerning that our government is taking on all the corrupt companies.  CEO's can bail with a hefty severance pay and all the ammenities with little or no consequences for their greedy actions, while the rest of us who are the working sector are the big losers!!!  Our democracy is turning into socialism - government has their little hand in everything.  What happened to the American dream - work hard, save and enjoy???  When the government has a hand in too many things, they can just as easily take it all away...

I think Bernanke should come check out these forums...I'm guessing he has low self esteem and is trying to get a pat on the back from anyone, even if it takes an $85B gift to do it.  I understand that one of the fundamental reasons for the Reserve is to help avoid financial disaster, but anyone with any amount of good ole' fashioned common sense can tell you IF IT'S NOT WORKING, STOP DOING IT.  Every action they take now is just going to damage our already FUBAR'd financial system.  Dropping the rate to 2% was a mistake, because as someone mentioned above somewhere, a lot of big banks didn't follow suit.  That fly in my soup that they called a "housing market rescue" was a mistake for one, if anyone is stupid enough to have an ARM on their house, sorry, but they should let someone else make their decisions (free advice:  banks are counting on you not to pay it off before the intro rate expires, after that is when they trap you)...and two, they had to bail-out the very companies they were trying to save in the first place.  AIG is just another eye-rolling, head-shaking event.  

I've got a challenge for someone...figure up how much money we've wasted on Neosporin and band-aids to fix our gashed and bleeding economy, and compare it to the war in Middle-East.  If you figure that out, and are feeling up to it, write some military leaders and inquire if that money could have been enough to finish the job overseas and get our troops home so the people whining about how wrong the war is can move on to something else to complain about.  Afterall, the AIG bail-out alone was $2B less than the initial $87B we put into the war......

If a working person does not pay his bills,he ends up on the streets.If a banker over spends he is bailed out.If a working man needs money to open a business he has to save to pay for it to open or he goes to the bank and has to prove it will work.The working person is payed little interest and the banks make money after they close for the day.When do we draw the line?Send the bankers to Russia or China,where the government runs everything.

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