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To me, I think the most critical thing to make note of is the extreme focus on what the fed and other central banks are going to do. The fact that most people (rightly) assume that fed action is the most significant factor for the market should really give people pause. Lastly, people should really consider what happens when fed action is no longer enough, and what happens then. |
They showed tremendous incompetence in letting the crisis happen (laughable oversight, too low rates).
This whole meme "the FED will bail us out" has to die before it dies naturally of fatal failure. The real economy is the real economy, not a bunch of econ PhDs wondering why the Phillips curve is not working any more. But we all know it'll take a fatal failure to remove it from people's minds.
Seriously, just think about it - you're trusting a bunch of bureaucrats that know no better than to follow what the bond market thinks (https://www.cmegroup.com/trading/interest-rates/countdown-to...). The blind leading the visually impaired.
And yes, as of Friday (last closing) the bond market tells the FED very clearly to cut the fed funds twice, already on the next meeting (Mar 18, 2020). Since Dec 2018 when Jerome Powell was humiliated by the markets and also somewhat by the President he dares not to do anything else than what the markets tell him to do, so very good chance for 2 cuts.