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by dragontamer 1366 days ago
When the Fed printed a Trillion dollars in November 2008 through QE1, and those permabears think crazy hyperinflation will occur immediately, yes, we ignore them.

When they say inflation will occur in QE2 in 2010, and those permabears think crazy hyperinflation will occur immediately, then yes, we ignore them.

When they say inflation will occur in QE3 in 2012, and those permabears think crazy hyperinflation will occur immediately, then yes, we ignore them.

When they say inflation will occur in QE4 in 2020, and those permabears think crazy hyperinflation will occur immediately, then yes, we ignore them.

Now its 2022, the Fed has been Quantitative Tightening for a year to deal with the inflation signals we're finally seeing. Hundreds of billions of dollars are being effectively destroyed by these policies.

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So yes, the Fed is finally acting on the inflation issue. But only because the data shows it is finally a problem. We don't just take the permabear crowd word immediately, we move when the data shows an issue. Not before.

There's some people who are just noise and are irrelevant to the discussion, unfortunately. You figure these things out over the years.

1 comments

> We don't just take the permabear crowd word immediately, we move when the data shows an issue. Not before.

Following the data means you're inevitably running after the facts. Running after the facts inevitably causes feedback loops. I'm sure those feedback loops were tuned correctly to not blow the whole thing up, right. Right? RIGHT??

Say ... what happened last time? Oh ... right.

> Running after the facts inevitably causes feedback loops

No?

2008 through 2014 had signs of deflation, so the Fed lowered rates and went into QE.

2022 has signs of inflation, so the Fed increased interest rates.

Where is the feedback loop here?