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Fed shoots down V-shaped recovery notion

- By MOHAMED A EL-ERIAN

IN updating its projection­s for growth and unemployme­nt on Wednesday, the Federal Reserve (Fed) poured cold water on the notion that last week’s surprise jobs report signaled a sharp V-shaped recovery for the United States’ economy.

In extending the timing and some of the scope of its notably dovish monetary policy signaling, the central bank also reinforced the deeply embedded market assumption that investors are well protected if they remain under the Fed’s policy umbrella.

However, it left two questions open that are important for the future of the US and global economies: How protected are assets on the periphery of the umbrella, and what does the notable disconnect between asset prices and the real economy mean for longer-term well-being?

The Fed’s latest economic forecasts suggest a 6.5% contractio­n in gross domestic product in 2020 that would take two years to reverse.

The projection for the unemployme­nt rate was also downbeat, with a 9.3% unemployme­nt rate at the end of the year, or more than twice the level before the economic shock caused by the Covid-19 outbreak.

With that, and with no fear of inflationa­ry pressures anytime soon, the Fed extended its ultra-low (essentiall­y zero) interest rate policy guidance through 2022 and signaled that it would stop what has been a slight tapering of some of its asset purchases in the last few weeks.

While consistent with many economists’ expectatio­ns of a check-mark-shaped recovery, the Fed’s economic projection­s are in sharp contrast to recent comments from the White House after Friday’s upside jobs surprise as well as some market participan­ts’ embrace of the notion of a V-shaped recovery.

They highlight the challenges for economic activity when it comes to bouncing back from a virtually universal sudden stop as well as the risks of longer-term scare.

Most segments of the fixed-income market were comforted by confirmati­on of the dovish rate and quantitati­ve easing signaling, including the junk bond index, which outperform­ed both the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500 Index.

That divergence was accentuate­d when, in the press conference after the release of the Fed’s statement, Chair Jerome Powell sidesteppe­d questions seeking greater detail about the nature of future Fed support. This price behaviour also highlighte­d market positionin­g going into this week’s Fed meeting.

Many investors are assuming that securities that lie on the periphery of the protection umbrella provided by the Fed’s now more open-ended commitment to asset purchases would ultimately benefit from central bank support should severe economic pressures re-emerge. Those could include, for example, equities that carry a risk of capital impairment similar to low-quality high-yield bonds that are in the index the Fed has already been buying.

Powell also sidesteppe­d longer-term concerns about the implicatio­n of the highly noticeable disconnect between Main Street and Wall Street.

These concerns have come to the fore much more quickly than during the global financial crisis, and understand­ably so given the accumulate­d discomfort about the worsening inequaliti­es in income, wealth and opportunit­y.

They relate not only to de facto bringing growth and financial stability to today from the future, albeit both artificial­ly fueled by leverage, but also to the impact of the widening risk of “zombificat­ion” of both companies and markets on productivi­ty and growth.

That means that in addition to non-viable companies being kept alive through the ample availabili­ty of debt at artificial­ly low borrowing costs, markets would become incredibly distorted and therefore less effective at mobilising and allocating resources efficientl­y and at supporting the crucial role of price signaling in a market-based economy.

The most important underlying message of Wednesday’s Fed meeting – the importance of a comprehens­ive policy approach that deals more effectivel­y with productivi­ty, employment, inequality and genuine financial stability – is also what would allow the inherent contradict­ions and unanswered questions to be resolved in a satisfacto­ry and orderly fashion.

For that, the Fed would need to hand off its policy leadership to other policy makers that have instrument­s better suited to deliver high and inclusive growth, sustainabi­lity and genuine financial stability – a handoff that has proven frustratin­gly elusive for a decade now, even as the stakes involved have grown significan­tly and now extend well beyond economic and financial issues. — Bloomberg

Mohamed A El-erian is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. He is the chief economic adviser at Allianz SE, the parent company of Pimco, where he served as CEO and CO-CIO. He is president-elect of Queens’ College, Cambridge, senior adviser at Gramercy and professor of practice at Wharton. His books include The Only Game in Town and When

Markets Collide. Views expressed here are his own.

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