Cooking a Perfect Economic Steak Is Harder Than It Looks — Just Ask the Fed

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As May approaches and the mercury rises, backyard grills and barbeque pits come alive. Everyone has a preferred temperature when cooking a perfect steak and most people tend to be pretty picky. If it’s undercooked, it feels like bloody, raw meat. If it’s overcooked, you might as well use it as a dog biscuit. Like Goldilocks, we like it just right. But let’s talk about a different kind of grill master – the Federal Reserve. Their task? Cooking up the perfect economic steak.

The Grill Master’s Dilemma

When elevated inflation threatens to overcook the economy, the Fed raises the fed funds rate to cool the economy’s temperature. Higher rates slow consumer and business spending thereby cooling economic growth and inflation. On the flip side, when the economy risks being undercooked (growing too slowly), the Fed cuts the fed funds rate to raise the economy’s temperature. This stimulates spending, growth, and inflation.

Fed Meeting Alert

This week, the Fed faces its next culinary challenge with a chance to adjust the U.S. economy’s temperature on Wednesday. Financial media will scrutinize Fed Chair Jerome Powell like paparazzi hounding Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce. The Fed has kept interest rates unchanged since last July and odds are, the Fed will keep rates steady once more – the market giving it a 97% chance. When 2024 began, the Fed had planned three rate cuts this year. But with inflation and consumer spending remaining higher than expected, they’re now expected to cut rates just once.

Fed's rate decision probabilities as it tries to cook the perfect economic steak.

The Critics’ Corner

Criticizing the Fed’s rate moves is financial media’s favorite pastime. Remember 2022? The Fed predicted a modest ¾% rate increase for the year. Instead, they cranked it up by 4.25% as inflation ran wild to levels not seen in 40 years. Go back and check Wall Street’s forecasts for any Fed rate predictions that came close to reality…I’ll wait right here. I’ve looked and the next one I find will be the first. The firms I respect the most had predictions that looked a lot like the Fed’s expectations. But everyone’s always right in hindsight.

The Perfect Economic Steak: Harder Than It Looks

The Fed’s main gig? Balancing a goal of maximum employment and stable prices (aka moderate inflation). But here’s the twist: Rate changes take six months to sizzle fully. How hard is that? Imagine cooking a steak at a preset temperature for six hours, hoping it’s just right. Surprise economic hot spots (inflation, spending, wages) and cool spots (war, elections) the Fed can’t foresee make it even tougher to cook the perfect economic steak. The 400+ PhD economists at the Fed play economic Bobby Flay, aiming for the sweet spot. Turns out, predicting the future is harder than grilling the perfect steak. 

The Investor Cookbook

Like men standing around their neighbor’s grill, financial media loves debating whether Fed actions under or over-cook the economy’s steak – it’s clickbait galore. The good news for long-term investors is they can ignore that fiery discussion🔥- one more way to win more by losing less. Instead, investors should focus on what they can control. By ensuring your portfolio is well-diversified and aligns with your tolerance for risk and time horizon, you can set your financial plan at the perfect temperature. Bon appetite!

Castle Quote: “Planning is bringing the future into the present so that you can do something about it now. – Alan Lakein

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One response to “Cooking a Perfect Economic Steak Is Harder Than It Looks — Just Ask the Fed”

  1. […] now the Fed has the difficult job of reaching for the thermostat. If rates fall, that short-term yield advantage evaporates fast. And […]

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This blog post is for informational only and should not be construed as personalized investment advice. It is not intended to supply legal, tax, or business advice. There is no solicitation to buy or sell securities or engage in a particular investment strategy.

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