Are the Voices in Fed President Kashkari’s Head Speaking Lies?

The government continues its approach towards full meltdown.  The stock market does too.  But when it comes down to it, these are mere distractions from the bigger breakdown that’s bearing down upon us.

The average working stiff has little time or inclination to contemplate gibberish from the Fed.  They’re too worn out from running in place all day to make much of it.  This fact accounts for the limited inkling the populace has for why there’s a great prosperity imbalance between wage earners and the creams.

If there was a better understanding of the scope and scale of the orchestrated larceny being conducted, practitioners of mass money debasement would be tarred, feathered and paraded down Main Street.  This seems a small penalty for turning markets into casinos and debasing the rewards of an honest day’s work.  Instead, they preserve their misplaced stature through the backwards process of taking the absurdly simple and twisting it up into the inordinately complex.

Several months ago, roughly mid-May, the yield on the 10-Year Treasury note briefly eclipsed 3 percent.  This prompted numerous articles – including one of our own – on the possible end of the great Treasury bond bubble.  But then, just as quickly as a pickpocket disappears into a crowded street, the yield on the 10-Year Treasury note slipped below 3 percent.

Now, as the days grow shorter, the yield on the 10-Year Treasury note is again pushing above 3 percent, at roughly 3.19 percent.  The yield on the 30-Year Treasury note – the long bond – is about 16 basis points higher.  Both are trending up, though generally at a slower incline than the Fed’s technocratic increases to the federal funds rate.

Hearing Voices

No doubt, it’s discrepancies like these that compel central bankers to seek metaphysical guidance.  On Monday, for example, Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari did something uncommon.  The man with crazy eyes – and even crazier ideas – went derelict from his duty of staring at daily Treasury yield rate curves.  Instead, with focus and intensity, he directed his full energy into the ether.

From the soft banks along the upper reaches of the Mississippi River, in a moment of weighty meditation, he closed his eyes and opened his ears.  Between slow, deep breaths Kashkari heard first a whisper.  Then soon a murmur.  Before he knew it, he heard voices.  The voices of interest rates.  They were speaking to him.  Here, Kashkari shares what the voices said:

“The bond market is saying, ‘hey we’re not so sure that the U.S. economic growth is going to be very strong in the future years.’

Apparently, these divine words from the bond market, though counter to the Fed’s dot plot, have convinced Kashkari there’s no need for further increases to the federal funds rate.

Kashkari, without question, is an extreme economic interventionist.  He’s also a crackpot.  Though he wears his burdens on his sleeve.

If you recall, as federal bailout chief, he functioned as the highly visible hand of the market.  When the sky was falling in early-2009, Kashkari awoke each morning, put on his pants, drank his coffee, and rapidly dispersed Hank Paulson’s $700 billion of TARP funds to the government’s preferred financial institutions.

Incidentally, the experience had an ill effect on Kaskkari’s mental health.  Soon after, he became a hermit, took to a cabin in the Sierra Nevada Mountains – near Donner Pass – and pursued his life’s purpose of chopping wood.  We thought we’d seen the last of him.

But alas, it’s impossible for true believers to amiably exit the trappings of public life for good.  After a failed California gubernatorial campaign in 2014, losing to retread Governor Jerry Moonbeam Brown, Kashkari resurfaced as Minneapolis Fed President in 2016.  We suppose this position was his reward for the abuse heaped upon him from grandstanding Senators while handing out vast sums of taxpayer dollars – your dollars – to Wall Street banks.

Are the Voices in Fed President Kashkari’s Head Speaking Lies?

Still, Kashkari’s current employment is not without merits.  He brings an odd mix of madness and clarity to the position.  In particular, he makes no bones about just what it is the Fed is doing.

Kashkari, taken at his word, is all for the perpetual bubbles that result from endless Fed induced credit creation.  This, based on his vision of monetary policy, is how to improve economic outputs, create jobs, and deliver a world of full employment.  Quite frankly, it’s nonsense.  But at least he’s open about it.

Others at the Fed make occasional ventures towards tighter monetary policy so as to later have more wiggle room to cut rates.  On Wednesday, in a Q&A with Judy Woodruff of PBS, Fed Chair Jerome Powell delivered contrary guidance from Kashkari’s.  According to Powell:

“The really extremely accommodative low interest rates that we needed when the economy was quite weak, we don’t need those anymore.  They’re not appropriate anymore.

“Interest rates are still accommodative, but we’re gradually moving to a place where they will be neutral.  We may go past neutral, but we’re a long way from neutral at this point, probably.”

Following Powell’s remarks, the yield on the 10-Year Treasury note jumped 15 basis points.  This notable spike brings with it several questions…

Are the voices in Kashkari’s head speaking lies?  Could a long run secular rising interest rate cycle, where the price of credit becomes more and more expensive, be upon us?

How this all plays out is anyone’s guess.  The current American experience of debt servitude establishes that the transition to a cycle of rising interest rates will be accompanied by mass defaults.  Moreover, there’s a massive 80 year buildup of public, private, and corporate debt to be purged from the financial system.

We suspect its reckoning will be extraordinarily disruptive.

Sincerely,

MN Gordon
for Economic Prism

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2 Responses to Are the Voices in Fed President Kashkari’s Head Speaking Lies?

  1. gn says:

    Kash’nKari is a true insider crackpot of the banksters. How? Who’s his Daddy? How did this nutcase arrive on the scene (from Goldman Sacksyou?) and take over TARP? Who owed him a huge favor? What credentials? Why hasn’t the public sent this imposter packing for good?

  2. Greg Wagener says:

    Excellent! When you are in part responsible for a corrupt and archaic system in which the main tenant is to not allow the market place to work, one must engage in ever greater overthinking and complexity in a futile attempt to rationalize such a system. Kashkari and Bullard are the poster boys for such absurd attempts. If either were to be nominated as Fed Chief they would drive the fiat currency system to its final demise. I can only surmise that they are kept around to make the likes of Chairman Powell appear as somewhat “reasonable”.

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