Kudlow: If Fed caters to Dems' progressive wish list and finance it, they will lose their independence

Kudlow explains that King Dollar is strong and reliable

I want to begin this evening with some thoughts on today's Senate hearing with Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and Fed Chair Jay Powell and the perfectly awful title of this hearing is: "CARES Act Oversight of the Treasury and Federal Reserve: Supporting an Equitable Pandemic Recovery". 

I want to note that during this pandemic emergency period, going back to February of 2020 last year, the Federal Reserve has truly done its part to inject cash into the economy. 

By our calculations over the past 18 months, the Fed has basically doubled its balance sheet from $4.1 trillion to $8.3 trillion. Essentially, they injected over $4 trillion of new cash into the economy. 

Another way of looking at it is through the M-2 money supply, which has jumped from $15.5 trillion to $20.5 trillion—a gain of $5 trillion, or 32%. 

Now, these are numbers that you folks out there probably don't care about. We're getting into the weeds here, but I like the weeds.  

I started my career in the weeds 48 years ago in open market operations at the New York Fed. The only reason I'm putting these numbers on the table is to show you how big they are. 

In other words, while emergency pandemic relief fiscal policy spent about $4 trillion last year, another $2 trillion this past winter and possibly headed for $6 trillion in the next month or two (Save America. Kill the bill). The Fed was doing its part by pumping in $4 trillion of high-power cash—leading to a $5 trillion jump in the money supply. 

Now, all that Fed money was basically sitting idle for much of last year. In the heart of the pandemic, with the government shutdown, most folks were playing defense by hoarding cash and avoiding risk.  

So, the money supply wasn't inflationary but as the economy re-opened, through the vaccine miracle of "Operation Warped Speed" the Feds continued pump-priming—really begins to threaten a longer-term inflation problem. 

Excess money is different from pandemic shortages. Although it's taken longer for market forces to heal those supply chain problems, continued Fed cash injections is a different matter and a worrisome matter.  

There is a connection between massive federal over-spending and massive Federal Reserve over-pumping. While budget deficits pile up, the Fed seems to be financing government spending and borrowing. 

Over the past 18-months, the central bank has purchased 57% of new, marketable Treasury debt issued. 57%! That's not supposed to happen, folks. 

Going all the way back to the 1951 Fed-Treasury Accord where the Fed stopped pegging long-term interest rates and stopped buying war-time bonds. 

In fact, you could go all the way back to 1913 with the original Federal Reserve Act where the central bank’s purpose was to provide an institutionalized currency elasticity, but not to finance government spending and borrowing.  

I remember that well.  I was there.

In Latin America and some other places, central banks buy the debt, print all the money, inflate the economy, and destroy the currency. Fortunately, we're not there yet. 

In fact, King Dollar is strong and reliable. Gold hasn't moved in quite some time. Commodity prices are on the rise, suggesting Powell and company are too loose and even the CPI break-evens in the inflation-adjusted Treasury bond market are showing higher inflation expectations. 

So, I'm getting worried. 

The Feds should have stopped buying mortgage bonds six months ago. Maybe they'll taper their portfolio purchases in a couple of months, but who knows. The rise in long-term bond rates in recent weeks is probably signaling the Fed it's time to raise their target rate before serious inflation breakout occurs. 

Meanwhile, the Fed and I presume the White House were right to dump the Dallas and Boston Fed presidents for trading stocks and bonds. That's a real big no-no.  

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By the way, we couldn't do that in the Executive Branch. I am really concerned that more and more federal spending and more and more borrowing puts more and more pressure on our central bank to finance the Democrats’ big-government socialism cradle-to-grave, welfare dependency assault on work, wages, jobs, and prosperity.  

The Fed has a tradition of independence, but if they cater to the Dems’ far-left progressive wish list and finance it, they will lose their independence. We will lose the inflation race and we'll lose king dollar in the process and that would be most unfortunate. 

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