There’s always something to howl about.

Peeking into Bernanke’s Crystal Ball

Do you want to look into the crystal ball through the eyes of Federal Reserve Chairman, Ben Bernanke? Will that help you predict mortgage rates and housing prices for 2007? I try to outguess the Fed all the time and I’ve decided that we’ll see a significant decline in short-term interest rates by YE2007.

The answer is usually buried in paragraph three or four of government reports. The economic benchmark that is oft overlooked is the nominal GDP growth rate. The nominal GDP growth rate includes the effect of inflation. Nominal GDP growth reflects the ability of the US economy to pay our debts. The Fed Funds rate reflects the interest the economy pays on its debt. When the two are imbalanced, runaway inflation or its opposite effect, asset deflation, occurs. When nominal GDP exceeds the Fed Funds rate, we have a capital surplus which leads to inflationary pressures. When nominal GDP is less than the Fed Funds rate, asset deflation occurs. Leveraged assets, notably stocks and houses, decline.

Let’s look at recent history to understand recent Fed activity as it related to nominal GDP. In 1990, 1995, and 2001, The Fed Funds rate exceeded nominal GDP; the economy wasn’t growing fast enough to service its debt. The Fed responded by slashing the Fed Funds rate to just under the nominal GDP to spur economic growth. This caused companies to take their money out of cash reserves (read: the bank) and into capital investment (read: plants, machines, equipment). That capital investment takes time so the Fed’s rate cuts take 12-18 months to have an effect. The Fed fine tunes the economy in a slow and deliberate manner, like the captain of an ocean liner.

The nominal GDP growth rate target for the Fed has been 5%. When it approached 7% in 2004, what do you think they did? They raised the Fed Funds rate 13 times in a two year period from a low of 1.0% to the present day 5.25%. That brought nominal GDP under control but it took 12-18 months for the economy to feel the effect. What happened in late 2005 through 2006? Asset prices, most notably, housing prices, declined.

So where are we headed now? Well, the third quarter of 2006 produced an annualized nominal GDP rate of 3.8%, well under the 5% target. This means that if Fed Funds remains at 5.25%, we’ll be in hock to the tune of 1.5% a year. Think of this imbalance as a huge negative amortization loan; we’re just tacking debt onto the balance.

So what’s a new Fed Chairman to do? Well, if he’s Ben Bernanke (and he is), he watches the next quarterly release to see if nominal GDP is truly slowing or the third quarter number was an aberration. IF, nominal GDP is slowing, expect the Fed to start an aggressive rate cutting campaign to just under the nominal GDP rate. He must cut if he wants to establish financial harmony in the nation’s economy. This means that asset prices (read: house prices) will start an upward trend some 12-18 months later.

What does that mean to the American homeowner? Well, if the Fed cuts Fed Funds to a 4% rate, their home equity lines of credit (HELOC) rates should drop some 1-1.5%. Adjustable rate mortgages (ARM) should drop some 1-1.5%. Fixed rate mortgages, however, are artificially low due to the “global savings glut”, a phrase coined by Bernanke, and should drop to just under 6%.

PLAN OF ACTION: Consider that housing prices may be reaching the bottom of the trough in the next 4-8 months. Mortgage rates could be materially lower by this time next year (1% or more). The Fed may be signaling that the time to buy homes with an ARM hinges upon the first quarter 2007 nominal GDP rate.