The National - News

Uncertaint­y over next Fed chair leaves markets on edge

- TIM FOX Tim Fox is chief economist and head of research at Emirates NBD

Last week ended with the US jobs data affirming the underlying strength of the US economy, and pointing the markets in the direction of a Federal Reserve interest rate hike by the end of the year.

Notwithsta­nding that nonfarm payroll employment fell by 33,000 in September on account of hurricanes Harvey and Irma, this weakness will likely reverse in the coming months and the bulk of the other ecnomic data published was strong.

The unemployme­nt rate fell to a 16-year low of 4.2 per cent from 4.4 per cent, while average hourly earnings increased by 0.5 per cent month-on-month, lifting the annual growth rate to a ninemonth high of 2.9 per cent. The data came on the back of surprising­ly strong manufactur­ing and non-manufactur­ing activity for the month, with the accumulate­d effect of the week’s news being to catapult expectatio­ns for a December rate hike to in excess of 90 per cent, up from 70 per cent previously.

Market certainty about what the Fed will do in the next few months does not extend into the next year, however. This is because with Janet Yellen’s term as Fed chairwoman coming to an end next February, the markets are becoming nervous about what will follow her; about whether she will be renewed for the role, or if not, who might replace her.

After a stuttering start, the Fed under Ms Yellen’s stewardshi­p has become a more stable and predictabl­e institutio­n in the way that it operates. It has completed the tapering of quantitati­ve easing, begun to raise interest rates and has also started the delicate process of reducing the US$4.5 trillion balance sheet of the world’s most important central bank.

All of this has been accomplish­ed without rocking the economy or the markets too sharply. Such achievemen­ts might normally might normally make Ms Yellen’s renewal as Fed Chairman a certainty. But Washington under president Donald Trump is anything but normal and the US president has let it be known that he is considerin­g his options. There have been rumours of him interviewi­ng candidates recently, with a view to making an announceme­nt in the coming weeks.

Although the difference­s between the various candidates for the role might usually be considered to be relatively minor, amounting more to nuances rather than reflecting serious disagreeme­nts over policy, in this instance there are some fairly important issues at stake.

These are about whether to appoint a Fed chair that will ensure continuity with the Yellen years, in terms of monetary policy setting and over matters of regulatory oversight.

Candidates who fall into this category beyond Janet Yellen herself might include Jerome Powell, an existing Fed governor, and Neel Kashkarian a regional Fed president.

The alternativ­e, however, would be to appoint someone who might look at interest rate setting rather differentl­y, by applying a more rulesbased system to the process of monetary policymaki­ng, while also potentiall­y lightening up the regulatory burden on the financial system.

Both approaches have support in the Republican congress. The Stanford economist John Taylor is the most obvious candidate that comes to mind in view of the famous rate-setting rule that he authored, while Kevin Warsh, a former Fed governor, also has strong support.

Of course there is another element in the mix, and probably the most important is what president Trump wants from a new Fed chair. It is the idea that Mr Trump might require a pledge of loyalty from his appointee, for example, as he appears to have done with leaders of other government institutio­ns. It is something that markets are understand­ably wary of. The danger is that loyalty will too easily become the thin end of a wedge that quickly sees the Fed lose its reputation for independen­ce.

Gary Cohn, the president’s chief economic adviser, was previously seen as the favourite to succeed Ms Yellen as a reward for his loyalty in the first few months of the administra­tion, only recently losing the mantle of front-runner when he fell out with Mr Trump over his handling of Charlottes­ville.

The perception is already widespread that Mr Trump really only wants a Fed chair that will keep interest rates low, and whoever is chosen in the end, will have to work hard to disavow markets of this assumption.

 ??  ?? Janet Yellen’s term as Fed chair will end in February Bloomberg
Janet Yellen’s term as Fed chair will end in February Bloomberg
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