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Viewpoint: The Fed's lost leadership opportunity

It's as if the U.S. central bank doesn't understand the danger of
inflation. Tom Sowanick is CIO of Clearbrook Research, part of
Clearbrook Financial, a Princeton, N.J.-based wealth-management
service provider.
The Federal Reserve will probably keep rates steady at its 25
June FOMC meeting. This is a missed opportunity for the Fed to
regain a senior role in the central-bank community.
How will the Fed explain why it didn't raise interest rates?
Other central banks have already started doing so -- or at least
they've suggested that rates will be increasing soon. Will the
economy be negatively impacted by a 25-basis point increase in
rates, or will rising inflation expectations be more destructive
to the U.S. consumer and economy?
Inflation must be a very strange concept for people under 50. As
a measured by the Consumer Price Index, it peaked in March 1980
at 14.80%. Then it steadily declined through October 2006 to 1.3%
before re-accelerating to 4.2%.
Too jaded
Many investors, traders, and economists have no direct experience
with rising inflation. Even Fed chairman Ben Bernanke has spent
most of his academic life in a disinflationary environment and
therefore, may be ill equipped to recognize the danger of letting
inflation accelerate.
Protecting assets in an inflationary cycle becomes the paramount
issue for investors. Fixed-income assets are the most vulnerable
to price erosion because of their fixed coupons and the inability
to adjust upwards with inflation.
Small-cap equities, historically, have been a good asset class to
own in an inflationary environment. Even in today's difficult
equity market, the Russell 2000 Index has lost only 5.04% this
year compared with a 10.25% decline for the S&P 500, and a
10.80% drop for the Dow Jones Industrial Average.
If inflation is the primary concern for global consumers and
investors, why would the Fed decide not to take a bold stance at
this week's FOMC meeting? It is unlikely that the housing market
would be affected by a 25-point rate adjustment. Financial
institutions have already seen their borrowing cost rise by
hundreds of basis points over the past year. Why miss the
opportunity to rein in the threat of inflation?
The risk of a renewed broad-based weakening of the dollar will be
heightened if the Fed does not begin to lift rates. The Fed knows
that the weak dollar has contributed measurably to inflation, not
just at home, but also in dollar-pegged countries. The Fed only
broadens the ravages of inflation globally by not making this
difficult choice.
Investors should consider small-cap stocks as a means of
participating and protecting against the threat of inflation.
Unfortunately, many investors and policy makers have enjoyed a
very long disinflationary cycle and may be too jaded to recognize
the need to change course. -FWR
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