Monetary policy took center stage this week. On Tuesday and Wednesday, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) huddled up, licked their collective index finger, held it up to the wind, and then commanded how they would intervene in credit markets.
With the major stock market indexes and housing prices near all-time highs. And with consumer price inflation still rising. These are hardly the conditions that demand cheaper credit.
Nonetheless, the Federal Reserve cut the federal funds rate for the first time since March 16, 2020 – during the dark days of the coronavirus panic. What’s more, the Fed went big.
Wall Street wanted a 0.50 percent rate cut. Thus, the Fed delivered a 0.50 percent rate cut.
Traders had waited all year for this moment. They’d diligently bid up share prices for months in anticipation. When the moment finally arrived, they reacted like a deer in the headlights. Continue reading