What Taper Tantrum? And, Will Yellen Pull A Bernanke?

 | Aug 31, 2015 02:04AM ET

Convergence of developments in late August 2015 have forced me to think about the “Taper Tantrum” of 2013, whether we are seeing much the same thing again, and whether it will have much the same consequence – a pull-back in the declared intentions of the U.S. central bank.

One of these developments, of course, has been the wild roller-coaster ride of equities in the U.S. and for that matter in the rest of the world, beginning with the massive loss of value as reflected in any index, from the close of business Friday, August 21, to the opening bells of Monday morning, August 24.

Another: the the expected Fed ‘normalization. ’ The head of the New York Fed said Wednesday that “the decision to begin the normalization process at the September FOMC meeting seems less compelling to me than it was a few weeks ago.” That is carefully qualified. Presumably something can still be somewhat compelling while becoming less compelling than it once had been: though the precise metrics of compellingness are difficult to fix.

Third: things seem to have settled down in Europe. Greece has fallen into line under the Brussels-Berlin pressures. Although the agreement there could yet unravel, the internal politics of SYRIZA and the country it is at least nominally ruling at the moment no longer seems a flashpoint of continental, much less of global, significance. It is natural to ask: what does all that mean for U.S. interest-rates normalization?

Yet another recent piece of the puzzle: a new monthly report from Deutsche Bank has a lot to say that reflects on Fed policy, of the recent past and the near future alike.

Hedge Fund Performance

Before we get to that, though, let’s look at what DB says about hedge fund industry performance through July. It was not sterling. The median performance of all strategies year to date is only 3.47, only slightly better than the MSCI World Index. In July alone the media fund gained only 0.31%, lagging behind the MSCI benchmark.