Could The Fed Lose Control Of The Frankenstein Economy It Has Created?
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Submitted by Tyler Durden <http://www.zerohedge.com/users/tyler-durden> on
01/02/2014 09:25 -0500

*Submitted by Charles Hugh-Smith of OfTwoMinds blog
<http://charleshughsmith.blogspot.com/2014/01/could-fed-lose-control-of-frankenstein.html>,*

*What if there are tail risks present in the Fed's Frankenstein Economy of
the same sort that Greenspan et al. failed to identify in 2008?*

*A longtime correspondent emailed me last week about the apparent
contradiction between a Federal Reserve that has had the power for five
years to counteract any decline and my call for a market decline in 2014:* why
would the Fed allow a market it has pushed higher for five years to ever
fall?

It's an excellent question, as it summarizes the key question: *is there
any limit on "don't fight the Fed?" Can the Fed push assets higher
essentially forever?* And if so, why did it fail to do so in 2008?

Former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan's recent bleatings in *Foreign
Affairs*,Why I Didn't See the Crisis
Coming<http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/140161/alan-greenspan/never-saw-it-coming>,
offered one primary reason: the Fed's models failed to accurately account
for "tail risk," (otherwise known as *things that supposedly happen only
rarely but when they do happen, they're a doozy*), because guess what--they
happen more often than statistical models predict.

I would add that *tail risk is a fancy name for unintended consequences of
central planning*. Thus Greenspan had more in common with failed Soviet
planners than he would ever admit.

*Greenspan also confessed that the Fed overcame the meltdown by creating
and lending unlimited sums of money--yes, unlimited.* Various accountings
after the fact identified $16 trillion in direct Fed backstops and loans to
global banks, but implied or indirect subsidies, backstops and lines of
credit added tens of trillions of dollars to the total bailout of the
privately held banking cartel.

This money spigot has remained open for five years, and a tiny reduction
($10 billion a month) is all the Fed dares to do lest the global markets
melt down again.

*So are there no "tail risks" or unintended consequences to leaving the
money spigot fully open for five years running?* Those who believe the
Fed's record of five years of rising asset prices proves its ability to
drive prices higher for another five years. In other words, having created
a Frankenstein economy that depends on unlimited credit pumping, the Fed
can control its monster with uncanny finesse.

The Fed's extraordinary success in suppressing risk, tail and every other
variety, has given punters and strategists alike a supreme confidence in
the Fed's ability to suppress risk for another five years, and another five
years after that. (The similarity to Soviet-era five-year plans is ironic
coincidence.)

*What if there are tail risks present in the Fed's Frankenstein Economy of
the same sort that Greenspan et al. failed to identify (or grossly
under-estimated) in 2008?*

*If the limitless hubris of the Frankenstein story doesn't resonate for
you, consider the unseen risks of monoculture agriculture as an apt
analogy.* In this view, the financial markets are a Fed-farmed monoculture
that is sustained solely by massive quantities of financial fertilizers and
carefully engineered "crops." The Fed claims its engineered monoculture is
as resilient as a market-based ecosystem, but this is simply not true:
monocultures are exquisitely vulnerable to tail risks that are impervious
to the policies intended to kill all threats.

Indeed, in the monoculture analogy, central planning engineering *perfects
the power of threats to bypass the system's defenses.*

*Despite the supremacy of Fed hubris and punter confidence in the Fed's
Frankenstein Economy, the likelihood of some tail risk emerging out of
nowhere is rising.* Indeed, the very confidence in central planners, i.e.
that the Fed is now the ultimate power in the Universe, is a prerequisite
for collapse.
Debt = Serfdom <http://www.oftwominds.com/blogapr13/debt-serfdom4-13.html>
(April
2, 2013)

-- 
CA. Rajesh Desai

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