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Why We Can’t Trust Fed Predictions

Ben Bernanke interviews from 2005-2007………

This goes to a post I did back in May,

Notice every metric they are now forecasting is worse than their expectations in January? This goes back to Bernanke saying in 2007 he thought the housing crisis would “be contained” and “would not effect overall economy”. The Bernake Fed has been consistently overly optimistic in its forecasts only to then have to lower them.

Now, the reason for being optimistic is obvious, to instill confidence in a fear ridden environment. But, after a while that strategy begins to backfire as folks begin to discount everything the Fed says as they begin to expect actual results to come in worse than expected. Then it becomes a “how much worse” guessing game.

I get the whole transparency effort vs Greenspan’s ramblings, but if we are going to do it this way, then the transparency has to be 100% honest and not an attempt to steer investor sentiment in a particular direction. In that case, the transparency is simply “transparent manipulation”.

Now, I also understand that no estimates are perfect, BUT, when over the course of a few years they almost to a 100% rate err in the same direction, then it is either intentional, OR the methodology to make them is flawed. Either scenario from the Fed is bad.

Just give it to us straight Ben, we can handle it far better than you think we can…


Disclosure (“none” means no position):

2 replies on “Why We Can’t Trust Fed Predictions”

Todd,

Any credence to the argument that the Fed was overly optimistic on the way down and will be overly cautious on the way out?

Im hoping so…

That's standard Fed operating procedure, Mark. If Bernanke acted according to type when the crisis began, its a safe bet that he'll be slow to raise rates post-crisis.

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