Fed's Monetary Policy Has Hit Dead End
CNBC,
3
September, 2012
The
Federal Reserve will likely embark on its next round of monetary stimulus in
two weeks, Bill Gross, Pimco’s co-chief investment officer, told CNBC’s "Street Signs" on Friday. But he
said more stimulus won’t do much to improve the country’s job market.
“What the Fed is targeting in terms of quantitative
easing is sustained improvement in employment,” Gross said after Bernanke's much
anticipated speech in Jackson Hole on Friday. “Until you see
several quarters of perhaps 7 percent unemployment, you will see QE.”
Gross
expects the Fed to act at its September meeting, but may hold off another month
if the August employment report is strong. (Read More: Bernanke at Jackson Hole: No More Easing, For Now.)
Earlier
in the day, Bill Gross tweeted that Bernanke would "go out with
his guns blazing." While more QE3 is a near certainty, it is increasingly
impotent, Gross tweeted.
The Fed
is likely to adopt an open-ended quantitative easing program without any specific targets as to
which assets it will buy, how much and for how long. That type of program “will
allow the Fed to move in a fashion that pleases most of the governors,” Gross
said.
While the
Pimco founder said the Federal Reserve and other central bankers believe QE will
assist economic growth, he isn’t convinced it will do much to improve the labor
market.
“Monetary
policy has reached a dead end,” Gross said. “Once you get down to zero percent
on interest rates, there’s not much left to stimulate.”
That
said, the company's mantra is “Don’t fight the Fed, but be afraid of the
consequences, or lack of consequences, going forward,” Gross added
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