Bernanke offers no hints of imminent Fed action

Steve Williams

Site Founder, Site Owner, Administrator
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER, AP


WASHINGTON — Chairman Ben Bernanke offered a sour assessment of the U.S. economy Tuesday and said the Federal Reserve is ready to take further action if growth doesn't pick up. But Bernanke provided no clues about what steps the Fed might take or whether any action was imminent.

Investors were hoping Bernanke would signal that the Fed planned to launch another round of bond purchases, to drive down long-term interest rates and encourage more borrowing and spending.

Stock prices, which had been up moderately in early trading, slipped after Bernanke's testimony was released. As he began testifying to the Senate Banking Committee just after 10 a.m. Eastern time, the Dow Jones industrial average was down about 14 points. Stocks fell further later in the morning.

Bernanke's midyear report to Congress on the economy comes as job growth has slumped, manufacturing has weakened and consumers have cut back on spending.

Bernanke acknowledged those trends. He noted that the economy, after growing at an annual rate of 2.5 percent in the second half of 2011, slowed to roughly 2 percent in the first three months of this year and likely weakened further in the April-June period.

The economy will likely continue to expand moderately, he said. But the meager growth would slow further if Europe's debt crisis worsens or if Congress doesn't address an impending budget crisis before the end of the year.

"Although declines in energy prices are now providing some support to consumers' purchasing power, households remain concerned about their employment and income prospects and their overall level of confidence remains relatively low," Bernanke said in his testimony.

Even if the Fed announces another round of bond purchases, some economists question how much that would help. They note that mortgage rates and other key interest rates are already at record-low levels.

Bernanke has noted that the Fed can do only so much to help the economy. In his testimony, he pointed to the Congressional Budget Office's warning that the economy could suffer a shallow recession next year if Congress fails to reach a budget deal that would avert steep tax hikes and across-the-board spending cuts.

"The most effective way that the Congress could help to support the economy right now would be to work to address the nation's fiscal challenges in a way that takes into account both the need for long-run stability and the fragility of the recovery," Bernanke said in his testimony. "Doing so earlier rather than later would help reduce uncertainty and boost household and business confidence."

The economy was already sputtering when the Fed's policymaking committee last met June 19-20. At that meeting, the Fed decided to extend a program that shifts its bond portfolio to try to lower long-term interest rates. The Fed also reiterated its plan to keep its key short-term interest rate near zero until at least late 2014.

Minutes of the June meeting show that Fed officials were open to taking further action — but were divided over whether the economy needs help now.

Since then, the government has reported that job growth slowed sharply in the April-June quarter — to 75,000 a month from 226,000 a month from January through March. The unemployment rate stayed at 8.2 percent in last month.

Former Fed official Roberto Perli, managing director at the research firm International Strategy & Investment, doubts the Fed will take action at its next meeting July 31-Aug. 1, preferring to wait for more evidence of where the economy is headed.

But if growth and job creation continue to weaken, he says, Fed policymakers might unveil another round of bond purchases at its Sept. 12-13 meeting.
 
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER, AP


WASHINGTON — Chairman Ben Bernanke offered a sour assessment of the U.S. economy Tuesday and said the Federal Reserve is ready to take further action if growth doesn't pick up. But Bernanke provided no clues about what steps the Fed might take or whether any action was imminent.

Investors were hoping Bernanke would signal that the Fed planned to launch another round of bond purchases, to drive down long-term interest rates and encourage more borrowing and spending.

Stock prices, which had been up moderately in early trading, slipped after Bernanke's testimony was released. As he began testifying to the Senate Banking Committee just after 10 a.m. Eastern time, the Dow Jones industrial average was down about 14 points. Stocks fell further later in the morning.

Bernanke's midyear report to Congress on the economy comes as job growth has slumped, manufacturing has weakened and consumers have cut back on spending.

Bernanke acknowledged those trends. He noted that the economy, after growing at an annual rate of 2.5 percent in the second half of 2011, slowed to roughly 2 percent in the first three months of this year and likely weakened further in the April-June period.

The economy will likely continue to expand moderately, he said. But the meager growth would slow further if Europe's debt crisis worsens or if Congress doesn't address an impending budget crisis before the end of the year.

"Although declines in energy prices are now providing some support to consumers' purchasing power, households remain concerned about their employment and income prospects and their overall level of confidence remains relatively low," Bernanke said in his testimony.

Even if the Fed announces another round of bond purchases, some economists question how much that would help. They note that mortgage rates and other key interest rates are already at record-low levels.

Bernanke has noted that the Fed can do only so much to help the economy. In his testimony, he pointed to the Congressional Budget Office's warning that the economy could suffer a shallow recession next year if Congress fails to reach a budget deal that would avert steep tax hikes and across-the-board spending cuts.

"The most effective way that the Congress could help to support the economy right now would be to work to address the nation's fiscal challenges in a way that takes into account both the need for long-run stability and the fragility of the recovery," Bernanke said in his testimony. "Doing so earlier rather than later would help reduce uncertainty and boost household and business confidence."

The economy was already sputtering when the Fed's policymaking committee last met June 19-20. At that meeting, the Fed decided to extend a program that shifts its bond portfolio to try to lower long-term interest rates. The Fed also reiterated its plan to keep its key short-term interest rate near zero until at least late 2014.

Minutes of the June meeting show that Fed officials were open to taking further action — but were divided over whether the economy needs help now.

Since then, the government has reported that job growth slowed sharply in the April-June quarter — to 75,000 a month from 226,000 a month from January through March. The unemployment rate stayed at 8.2 percent in last month.

Former Fed official Roberto Perli, managing director at the research firm International Strategy & Investment, doubts the Fed will take action at its next meeting July 31-Aug. 1, preferring to wait for more evidence of where the economy is headed.

But if growth and job creation continue to weaken, he says, Fed policymakers might unveil another round of bond purchases at its Sept. 12-13 meeting.

The Dow didn't seem to mind.

Investors, er, sorry, the manipulators, inside traders, and computer algorithms drove the market up so far today. :)
 
There are so many problems with the markets that it's hard to even make a meaningful statement about them, though this one is not a bad beginning...

Investors, er, sorry, the manipulators, inside traders, and computer algorithms drove the market up so far today

The foundational problem, though, is that 2% growth is really bad news. We have a world economic system that runs on endless expansion. Let's look at it in miniature to make it simple: if you own a business that makes you and your family wealthy, makes a small group of senior managers extremely affluent, makes a sizeable group of middle managers upper middle class, makes a couple of thousand employees solidly middle class and makes a great product that makes tens of thousands of customers very happy, and makes a hell of a contribution to the local economy, you're a raging success. Take that company public and all of the above is a failure if it doesn't make more every quarter.

The criteria for "success" in publicly-traded markets is built on a completely unsustainable model that is devouring itself. All of our talk of sustainable energy, crops, oceans etc., is meaningless as long as the markets our economies are built on are unsustainable. We need a new model.

Tim
 
There are so many problems with the markets that it's hard to even make a meaningful statement about them, though this one is not a bad beginning...



The foundational problem, though, is that 2% growth is really bad news. We have a world economic system that runs on endless expansion. Let's look at it in miniature to make it simple: if you own a business that makes you and your family wealthy, makes a small group of senior managers extremely affluent, makes a sizeable group of middle managers upper middle class, makes a couple of thousand employees solidly middle class and makes a great product that makes tens of thousands of customers very happy, and makes a hell of a contribution to the local economy, you're a raging success. Take that company public and all of the above is a failure if it doesn't make more every quarter.

The criteria for "success" in publicly-traded markets is built on a completely unsustainable model that is devouring itself. All of our talk of sustainable energy, crops, oceans etc., is meaningless as long as the markets our economies are built on are unsustainable. We need a new model.

Tim

Tim, you are 100% correct. Very coherently spelled out. The biggest lie told to the American pubic is that the interests of management in public companies is aligned with customers and employees. What a farce. The myth of perpetual growth is a sad and pathetic paradigm. We have seen the largest transfer of wealth in the history of this country in the last 30 years. That is, the transfer of trillions in wealth from the lower and middle classes to the
a tiny percentage of connected, rule breaking self dealing few. The kicker? They claim the government is trying to redistribute wealth downward. What a hoot!
 
There are so many problems with the markets that it's hard to even make a meaningful statement about them, though this one is not a bad beginning...



The foundational problem, though, is that 2% growth is really bad news. We have a world economic system that runs on endless expansion. Let's look at it in miniature to make it simple: if you own a business that makes you and your family wealthy, makes a small group of senior managers extremely affluent, makes a sizeable group of middle managers upper middle class, makes a couple of thousand employees solidly middle class and makes a great product that makes tens of thousands of customers very happy, and makes a hell of a contribution to the local economy, you're a raging success. Take that company public and all of the above is a failure if it doesn't make more every quarter.

The criteria for "success" in publicly-traded markets is built on a completely unsustainable model that is devouring itself. All of our talk of sustainable energy, crops, oceans etc., is meaningless as long as the markets our economies are built on are unsustainable. We need a new model.

Tim

Tim, you are 100% correct. Very coherently spelled out. The biggest lie told to the American pubic is that the interests of management in public companies is aligned with customers and employees. What a farce. The myth of perpetual growth is a sad and pathetic paradigm. We have seen the largest transfer of wealth in the history of this country in the last 30 years. That is, the transfer of trillions in wealth from the lower and middle classes to the
a tiny percentage of connected, rule breaking self dealing few. The kicker? They claim the government is trying to redistribute wealth downward. What a hoot!


And I thought I was alone in my thinking. Thanks guys. This is very refreshing to read.

I am not sure I entirely understand what drives the "Market" but it is not necessarily economics... It is very strange and I wonder how sustainable it really is when most of the world economy is virtually driven by more similar to a casino than economics. We may delay by all available tactics the outcome but the correction is due and when it unleashes... There will be Blood...
 
I was a bit early last week but i think the markets are ready for a euro(problem)dive in the coming time, one postive thing can be said about the worlds markets , and that is ,that it will stop the dictatorial expansion of the EU .
Nobody voted for it ,it was a political invention and the markets are gonna break it , the market doesnt buy this debt union:D

What drives the market ????? money .

Anybody whos after it ,share holders / market makers /optionstraders what ever , i dont think there is much buy and hold left in europe though
 
Apple topping ???
Double top (this year) around 1422 1418 s en p , we might get the europe dip right now , there are rumours in the papers overhere that heineken for example is withdrawing funds from greece , they might exit the euro this year
 
With the " endless" 40 billion a month buying of mortgage backed securities i think the fed has fired its final bazooka , just like M draghi did when they decided to buy unlimited bonds of the debt loaded southern european countries .
I think the market has finally topped ,at least the dutch index but i think the SPX as well
 

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