Fed May Cut Rate to Below Inflation, Risking New Asset Bubbles
By Craig Torres and Simon Kennedy

Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) -- The Federal Reserve may push interest rates
below the pace of inflation this year to avert the first simultaneous
decline in U.S. household wealth and income since 1974.

The threat of cascading stock and home values and a weakening labor
market will spur the Fed to cut its benchmark rate by half a
percentage point tomorrow, traders and economists forecast. That would
bring the rate to 3 percent, approaching one measure of price
increases monitored by the Fed.

``The Fed is going to have to keep slashing rates, probably below
inflation,'' said Robert Shiller, the Yale University economist who
co-founded an index of house prices. ``We are starting to see a change
in consumer psychology.''

So-called negative real interest rates represent an emergency strategy
by Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and are fraught with risks. The central
bank would be skewing incentives toward spending, away from saving,
typically leading to asset booms and busts that have to be dealt with
later.

Negative real rates are ``a substantial danger zone to be in,'' said
Marvin Goodfriend, a former senior policy adviser at the Richmond Fed
bank. ``The Fed's mistakes have been erring too much on the side of
ease, creating circumstances where you had either excessive inflation,
or a situation where there is an excessive boom that goes on too long.''

Adjusting Outlook

The Federal Open Market Committee begins its two-day meeting today and
will announce its decision at about 2:15 p.m. in Washington tomorrow.
Officials will also discuss updates to their three-year economic
forecasts at the session.

Bernanke, 54, and his colleagues on Jan. 22 lowered the target rate
for overnight loans between banks by three-quarters of a percentage
point. The cut was the biggest since the Fed began using the rate as
its main policy tool in 1990 and followed a slide in stocks from Hong
Kong to London that threatened to send U.S. equities down by more than
5 percent.

The central bank will probably lower the rate to at least 2.25 percent
in the first half, according to futures prices quoted on the Chicago
Board of Trade. The chance of a half-point cut tomorrow is 88 percent,
with 12 percent odds on a quarter- point.

Inflation, as measured by the personal consumption expenditures price
index minus food and energy, was a 2.5 percent annual rate in the
fourth quarter, economists estimate. The Commerce Department releases
the figures tomorrow.

Mortgage Binge

The last time the Fed pushed real rates so low was in 2005, in the
middle of the three-year housing bubble, when consumers took on $2.9
trillion in new home-loan debt, the biggest increase of any three-year
period on record.

Aggressive rate cuts are justified if there's ``conclusive evidence''
that household income prospects are in danger, said Goodfriend, now a
professor at the Tepper School of Business at Carnegie Mellon
University in Pittsburgh.

They might be. Real disposable income grew at a 2.1 percent annual
pace in November, the slowest in 16 months, as higher food and energy
costs eroded paychecks. Home prices in 20 U.S. metropolitan areas fell
6.1 percent in October from a year earlier, the most in at least six
years. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index is down 15 percent from its
record on Oct. 11.

The last time household real estate, stocks and real incomes all
declined in a quarter was during the 1974 recession, according to
calculations by Macroeconomic Advisers LLC.

`Losing That Prop'

``Wealth had been rising because of strong home prices'' and stock
gains, said Chris Varvares, president of Macroeconomic Advisers in St.
Louis. ``Now, we are losing that prop to consumption, so it all comes
down to growth in real income.''

Varvares predicted that housing and investment portfolios will add
nothing to consumption this year, while incomes, after inflation, may
gradually rise ``so long as oil behaves.'' The firm expects the
economy to grow at a 1 percent to 2 percent annual pace in the first half.

``A big part of the 75 basis point surprise was to blunt the worsening
of financial conditions'' that may reduce employment and hurt income
growth, Varvares said. The firm predicts a half-point cut tomorrow.

``That need not be the end,'' Harvard University economist Martin
Feldstein, said in an interview. ``They can keep coming back and
revisiting it every six weeks.''

Feldstein, a member of the group that dates U.S. economic cycles, said
any recession this year ``could be much more painful because of the
fragility of the financial sector.''

The Fed incorporates wealth effects, or the impact of changes in
household assets on spending, in its economic model. Americans cut
spending by about 5 cents for every $1 of decline in their home values
or stock portfolios, economists estimate.

``We are likely to see another wave of problems in the consumer-credit
side,'' John Thain, chief executive officer of Merrill Lynch & Co.,
said at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, last week.
``This is going to be exacerbated by the rise in unemployment and we
have issues with higher energy prices.''


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