Fed: A Psychological Battle Held Against Investors

 | Jul 23, 2021 08:03AM ET

Even if the Fed’s taper doesn’t come until 2023, the threat itself will have a material psychological effect. Will we keep a clear head in September?h2 The Worst Kept Secret/h2

While investors worried that the European Central Bank (ECB) would turn hawkish as the summer months heat up, I warned on Apr. 27 that the prospect was quite laughable.

I wrote:

There seems to be some confusion about the European Central Bank’s (ECB) – and other major central banks’ – suspension of their 84-day US dollar liquidity operations. For context, the swap facility was created to ensure that US dollars remained abundant during the coronavirus crisis. However, keep in mind that “an important liquidity backstop to ease strains in global funding markets,” is code for avoiding a large spike in the US dollar. The bottom line? The suspension of the facility is not bearish for the greenback, if anything, it’s bullish because it reduces the available supply of US dollars.

If that wasn’t enough, recent whispers of the ECB tapering its bond-buying program are extremely premature. With the European economy still drastically underperforming the US, it’s actually more likely that the ECB increases the pace of its bond-buying program.

The US Federal Reserve (FED) and the ECB are worlds apart. With the FED likely to reveal its taper timeline in September, inflation differentials highlight the regional dichotomy.

Please see below: