Draghi On Deck

 | Sep 03, 2015 12:08AM ET

One of the many challenges for participants today in navigating the macro-straits, is at times dismissing the conventional market wisdom for more counter-intuitive perspectives - and always keeping an open mind to where and when the respective monetary handlers may choose to intervene, regardless of one's bias or market posture. We've noted in the past that since the markets arrival at ZIRP and QE in Q4 of 2008, many long-standing bedrock orthodoxies have been turned on their head, from "inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon..." - to the other bookend policy expectation that QE lowers interest rates.

Back in 2009 and 2010, some of the most prominent minds in and around finance argued that such large scale asset purchases by the Fed risked "currency debasement and inflation" and would not achieve the Fed's objective of promoting employment. So confident with their assumptions, some of them eventually scribed a manifesto as a strongly worded open letter to then Fed chairman Bernanke in November 2010.

Notwithstanding the fact that inflation wasn't exactly the enemy of the state during and after the crisis... LSAP's did not usher in an era of hyperinflation, but did at the outset of each program, raise inflation expectations and bolster risk appetites, that over time helped smooth the transition from the financial crisis, which ultimately became reflected in the long trend lower in the unemployment rate.

With world markets coming under significant pressure this August and with the September ECB meeting on the docket today, the probability that President Draghi implies or takes further action in Europe has increased. Moreover, from a comparative perspective of the currency and bond markets from the last deflationary scare, there are some similarities to where the Fed surprised the markets in March 2009 with an expanded salvo of stimulus, to the tune of over twice the initial program introduced at the end of November 2008.