I'll start off by saying: I was dead wrong about "no QE3" this time. With the dollar in crash mode and equities trading at multi-year highs, I did not expect the Fed to do anything more than continue their "Virtual QE3" talking-points program.
With that bit of crow-eating out of the way, it's time to adjust to the new realities and discuss what the program means for the market and the economy; additionally, one simply cannot avoid some discussion on the moral hazard and the politics of it.
Let's start off with what the program entails. Quantitative Easing is government-speak for "printing more money" (although, in today's world, this is less about the physical printing press and more about digital transfers). The Fed has been reduced to printing because their usual go-to monetary tool, which is lowering interest rates, has long been maxed-out and ineffective. Fed fund rates are already effectively negative; thus there's nothing more to be done in that regard.
The Fed has departed somewhat radically even from previous QE programs, as this is the first program with no fixed end-date. Therefore, instead of calling it "QE3," it seems more appropriate to name the new program "QE-Infinity" (I would simply use a lemniscate after "QE," but my font doesn't allow it). On Thursday, the Fed committed to buying $40 billion worth of Mortgage Backed Securities (MBS) every month in an ongoing open-ended program, which, for those keeping tabs, equals a total commitment of $85 billion a month when combined with existing programs. This will cease when the Fed "sees substantial improvement in the labor market."
Of course, this immediately begs the question, "What will the Fed view as 'substantial improvement?' What are the qualifiers, and where will it end?"
The answer is a resounding: "Nobody knows." In Bernanke's own words: "We haven't yet come to a set of numbers, but we're guaranteeing that we won't tighten too soon." That statement alone should create some discomfort with American taxpayers, as the unaccountable (to voters) Fed is admittedly setting a far-reaching policy with no qualifiers. But naysayers are glibly refuted, as Bernanke demonstrates in a statement discussed later.
Printing money floods the market with more dollars, which makes dollars worth less (supply and demand: more supply equals lower value), which means that tangible assets priced in dollars -- such as oil and food -- end up costing more. This is euphemistically referred to as "inflation."
One of the arguments against prolonged low interest rates and flooding the money supply is that these actions punish savers in two ways: artificially low interest rates hit savers' accounts directly; and printing money hits them a second time and forces them into high-risk assets as they try to keep up with inflation.
In a weak attempt to address the fact that his policies punish savers, Bernanke responded with this glib straw-man argument: "You can't save without a job."
Yes, that's a true statement. But it's not a legitimate argument. Even in this depressed labor market, there are still far more Americans
with jobs than without them; and there are more and more retirees struggling to survive on savings being held in accounts that currently yield virtually no return.
Bernanke's argument that
trying to add a few percentage points to the employment rate justifies punishing everyone else because "you can't save without a job" is akin to the automotive industry announcing that, henceforth, they're only going to produce super-cheap cars that have no seatbelts, no bumpers, and no other safety features -- on the justification that these dirt-cheap cars will allow more people to afford cars. Ben's simplistic logic is essentially: "You can't die in a car wreck if you don't have a car!" Can't argue with that statement. But it doesn't address the real issue at all; it merely reframes it into terms where he can seemingly win the argument.
His statement also assumes the underlying presupposition that an ongoing QE program will
actually improve the labor market -- and that assumption is not a given. There is an ongoing debate over how much influence the Fed actually holds over the labor market, and the question was asked of Bernanke yesterday: "How does boosting assets really help the real economy?" Bernanke replied, "There are a number of different channels: Mortgage rates, corporate bond rates, and increase in home prices and stock prices."
This is another non-answer that avoids the real question. Bernanke responds that there are "different channels," but he does not establish that these channels have any direct causation in creating more jobs (he also argued this earlier, but again in a cursory manner based on unproven presuppositions).
Nor does Bernanke establish how these "channels" materially differ from what's already been tried. In fact, Esther George, president of the Federal Reserve bank in Kansas City, recently asked this rhetorical question: “Is there anyone not borrowing today or purchasing a house because interest
rates aren’t low enough? Do we expect that businesses will hire if their
long-term rates are lower?”
The follow-up question that needed to be asked was, "I understand that, Mr. Bernanke; allow me to rephrase: How do these 'different channels'
actually help the labor market?"
QE1 and QE2 did not appreciably help the labor market, as shown on the employment chart below. But, hey, this time will be different, right?
While the QE programs haven't helped the labor market, they have pushed up the stock market and commodities through inflation, as shown on the chart below: