Fed’s Tapering of QE3 Has Begun

So, despite the consensus of pundits I reported in this post, the Fed has begun tapeing off its third round of quantitative easing earlier than expected, known in economist parlance as QE3. Apparently, the Fed is taking it slow and wants to be cautious about its reduction of quantitative easing so as to not jeopardize the current recovery. The Fed’s stated unemployment rate target is 6.5%, and most pundits seem to feel that the Fed won’t start to raise interest rates until April of 2015. But the pundits were also wrong about when the Fed would start easing off the gas peddle that is quantitative easing, so take those predictions with a grain of salt.

On an addtional note, Janet Yellen has been sworn in and started her tenure as the first female chair of the Fed. Obviously, she’s not even a full week into the job yet, but it seems she will break with Ben Bernanke’s policy of putting the Fed’s cards on the table and going to great lengths to explain what they were doing and way. Instead, it seems she prefers the style of Alan Greenspan: speak rarely, do what you think is best, and don’t worry about the pundits. So where will the Fed be headed for the next year? Your guess is as good as mine, but watch this space.

Janet Yellen before the Senate Banking Committee

If you happen to follow the Federal Reserve, then you are aware that Ben Bernanke’s tenure at chair of the Fed will be up soon. President Obama has nominated Janet Yellen to the post, making her the first woman nominee. There doesn’t appear to be too much push back from the Senate, and in all likelihood she will be confirmed as the first woman chair of the Fed. You can read a good description of the hearing, including Yellen’s articulation to her intention to continue QE3 into the future, here.

It’s worth noting that, despite the obscurity of the position, the chair of the Federal Reserve is probably the most influential person in the U.S. economy, in many ways much more influential than the President or Congress. In that regard, I think you could classify this breaking of a glass ceiling on par with Nancy Pelosi becoming the first woman Speaker of the House.

What do you, dear readers, think of Yellen as a pick? A victory for modern feminism? Smart/ disastrous continuation of the Bernanke policies? Sound off in the comments.