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How powerful is the Federal Reserve?

With Bernanke about to take over, time for a reality check

updated 7:17 p.m. ET Nov. 26, 2005

The mighty Federal Reserve. It’s more powerful than a ballooning housing market, able to stop inflation in a single bound. And, if it slips, if it uses its super powers unwisely, if it goes too far, it could push the economy into recession with just a nudge of its pinkie.

That’s one way of looking at the nation’s central bank. Under outgoing Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan, it has become the main way. The Fed is seen as the arbiter of all things economic, the capital of Moneyland, with Greenspan as its ruler and resident hard-to-understand genius.

With the chairman’s seat at the central bank expected to turn over to Ben Bernanke in January, it’s time for a reality check. Just how powerful is the Fed?

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The Fed has two missions, said Quincy Krosby, chief investment strategist at The Hartford, the Connecticut-based insurance company. Its primary mandate is price stability, keeping inflation at bay. It’s secondary charge is maintaining an environment of sustainable economic growth, which is interpreted to mean sustaining jobs.

To achieve its missions, the Fed has two main tools: It regulates the money supply and increases or decreases short-term interest rates. More money plus lower interest rates are the tools of an “accommodative” Fed, a Fed trying to spark economic growth. If the Fed decreases the nation’s money supply and raises interest rates, it is tightening, trying to slow the economy and stave off inflation.

After 12 rate hikes in a row, the short-term federal funds rate is at 4 percent, a four-year high, and Wall Street watches the Fed with the rapt attention a parent gives a small child who is playing close to the street.

“We have said it before, and we shall say it again: The key to next year’s economic and financial market performance hinges upon the Fed not overreacting to the perceived inflation threat,” a recent Merrill Lynch research report said.

When the Fed released notes Tuesday from its most recent policy meeting, traders bid stocks higher after sensing a glimmer of hope that an end to the Fed’s rate hikes was in sight. News that the Fed might stop giving strong hints about where rates are heading was the top story in Wednesday’s Wall Street Journal.

Wrote Stephen Wood, portfolio strategist at Russell Investment Group, “It is Fed interest rate policy that drives economic cycles. In the context of today’s financial news flow, investors would do well to remember that oil, terrorism, natural disasters, etc. gain significance relative to current Fed policy.”

Citigroup’s chief global equity strategist, Ajay Singh Kapur, quotes an old market adage, “Economies don’t die of old age, they are always murdered by the central bank.” Eight of the last 12 recessions were preceded by Fed rate hikes, he said, a figure that is mentioned and repeated often by the “all-powerful Fed” school of Wall Street strategists these days.


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