This post The New Players at the Fed You Need to Know: 2016 Edition appeared first on Daily Reckoning.
Think of the Fed as if it were your favorite baseball team. Fans may be loyal to one team, but they know the lineup changes. They know there are winning seasons and losing ones. The handicapping process never ends. They wonder if veteran players still have what it takes. They wonder if there are any promising rookies joining the team. Or if the general manager is working on some trades. These are the questions baseball fans ask. You need to ask the same questions of the Fed. Before we drill down on the Fed’s lineup for next season, it’s useful to review the Fed’s structure. The Fed is a strange hybrid of public and private elements. The Fed is a “system” of 12 regional reserve banks supervised by a board of governors. The 12 regional banks are located in major cities around the country (Boston, New York, Chicago, etc.). The regional banks are privately owned by the commercial banks in each region. Those private stockholders elect a board of directors, and the directors hire a president for each regional reserve bank. The board of governors of the entire system is based in Washington, D.C. The board consists of seven members selected by the president of the United States and confirmed by the U.S. Senate. Among the board of governors is a chair and a vice chairman also selected by the president and confirmed by the Senate. This arrangement gives a total of 19 principal policymakers — seven governors plus 12 regional reserve bank presidents — some appointed by the president and some hired indirectly by private banks. Things get more complicated from there. Interest rate policy is not made by the governors alone or by the reserve bank presidents. It is set by the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC). The FOMC meets eight times per year (about every six weeks). It has 12 members consisting of all seven members of the board of governors plus five of the 12 regional reserve bank presidents. Still with me? Good, because it gets even more complicated… but you’ll understand it all when I’m finished. Of the five regional reserve bank presidents who can vote on the FOMC, one has a permanent seat. That’s the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. The other four rotate from among the remaining 11 regional reserve banks on a one-year term. This rotation is important because some of the regional reserve bank presidents are “hawks” (favoring a rate hike). Some others are “doves” (favoring continued ease). Knowing which are on the FOMC each year is part of what you need to know to forecast policy. Even with this FOMC formula in mind, there are still surprises. Fed officials often quit or retire before their terms expire (to return to academia or pursue other business opportunities). This can lead to surprise appointments by the president or vacancies, which skew the voting one way or another. As they say in baseball, “You can’t tell the players without a scorecard!”
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The post The New Players at the Fed You Need to Know: 2016 Edition appeared first on Daily Reckoning.