Economy demands full attention

Commentary: Fed can't fight 'fire' alone

Inman News

Flickr photo by <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/duchamp/4589838/" target=blank>Duchamp</a>.Flickr photo by Duchamp.

The Fed's announcement of extraordinary intervention triggered ordinary responses in the markets: stocks had a nice moment; inflation mono-maniacs blew up gold and oil, and ran from the dollar; the 10-year Treasury note dropped from 2.95 percent to 2.52 percent in seconds; and briefly mortgages made it to 4.75 percent without fee.

All are reversing. The net mortgage gain: The plague of origination fees since December may give way, but rates are where they were, just under 5 percent, propped by unlimited demand. If the response has been tepid, did the Fed do the right thing? Absolutely. More, please (per Pimco's Bill Gross: We need double or triple).

Here's the problem: For more than a year, the markets have seen the Fed as the only branch of government responding to a first-class economic emergency. No matter what the Fed does, it cannot put out the fire by itself. It must have help from all engines of government, and from us. It still does not have that help.

Last year our government appeared disabled at the top, an exhausted and dysfunctional presidency not in the game, creating policy in a vacuum and forcing the Fed chairman and Treasury secretary into public leadership roles beyond their means.

Incredibly, we still suffer from a void at the top -- very different in kind, but not result. From election day well past the inaugural, President Obama appears to have given top priority to a new budget reordering social priorities. Without a sound economy, there is no money for healthcare or carbon or anything.

Without overriding priority, the clarity that only the president can bring, Congress is in normal fibrillation but with a virulent additive: The people are confused, frightened, angry, in pain and want retribution but don't know who to strike. Democratic government is a mirror of the people, and in Congress we are getting who we are.

Specifics. To call this financial team a beached whale is an insult to whales and beaches. And it's not their fault -- Geithner has been left out to dry on the sand just as badly as hapless Hank Paulson, former Treasury secretary. It is the president's duty to display and to insist on a sense of urgency, and to explain to the people the predicament, and the plans of the administration -- if not formed, when they will be formed. We have none of that.

Not prime timing. Showing up, glowing and funny on "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno" is appropriate for another time. The same goes for running Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke out on "60 Minutes" (A new Depression? "I think we've averted that risk." We're out of the woods? "No."). The sudden leap of the president's economic adviser, Larry Summers, into the public breach last week, with nothing to say ... shades of Baghdad. ...CONTINUED

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Submitted by Gene Urban -- The Urban Team on March 20, 2009 - 1:23pm.

Lou,

You say the President needs to provide a proper target for the nation's anger and insult us by pointing to corporate BOD's.

All the while you praise the efforts of the FED. My God man, the problem is the FED. Like so many others, you fail to address the FED's responsibliity for creating artificial market indicators, flooding paper money into the system, and creating a massive debt market.

We do need to focus our naional anger and it should be at the FED.

 
Submitted by Benjamin Clark on March 20, 2009 - 2:04pm.

I'll only respond to one phrase in your article:

"...rates are where they were, just under 5 percent, propped by unlimited demand."

I'm hearing lots of double talk in the industry right now. On the one had I hear there are no borrowers. On the other hand I hear rates are being "propped" up by lenders who are processing too many applications...

COME ON... WHICH IS IT?

Benjamin D. Clark
Certified Negotiation Expert
Principal Broker
Homebuyer Representation, Inc.
Salt Lake City, UT
www.activerain.com/eba
(801) 969-8989

President-Elect
National Association of Exclusive Buyer Agents
www.naeba.org

 
Submitted by John Rakoci on March 20, 2009 - 2:16pm.

It seems no one wants to mention if Clinton had not reversed banking regulations the housing boom would not have been all it was. The reversal was a ploy to get people into homes they could not afford. The FED is doing what it can. As each day passes it seems obama failed HS economics and never took another course. With his friends like Schumer, pelosi, and Barney it is a wonder the economy is in as good as shape as it is.

 
Submitted by Robert A. Hulme on March 20, 2009 - 2:43pm.

The President is doing the best he can under the present circumstances, the Fed is trying to their best to go along and try and make something good happen. We need to encourage and get behind their efforts and all be a little more positive even though that is difficult given our present situation.

Robert A. Hulme
Realtor, GRI, e-PRO
Prudential Utah Real Estate
Loan Officer
Mortgage Xpress
www.UtahCountyHomes.ws
www.UtahCountyRealEstate.us