When Banks Get Beat, Who Wins?

 | Dec 12, 2018 06:03PM ET

The chair of the Federal Reserve is one of the most powerful human beings on the planet. For one thing, he/she exerts an inordinate amount of influence on the cost of capital. Consumers, businesses and governments make critical decisions based on the attractiveness as well as the ability to borrow money.

For another, financial markets hang on both the specific actions as well as the verbal guidance of the Fed chair. Currencies, commodities, bonds, stocks. The movement of each market-based asset is often a function of central bank monetary policy.

Janet Yellen served as the chair of the Federal Reserve last year. And when asked about the possibility of a financial crisis on par with 2008’s systemic breakdown, Ms. Yellen said that she didn’t expect to see one happen “in our lifetimes.” Her reasoning? The financial system had become safer due to several factors, including annual stress testing of banks.