Saturday, July 11, 2026

Warsh and forward guidance - NOT

 


What is clear from the first Warsh press conference is that he will not provide forward guidance on the Fed’s actions. Chairman Warsh is not going to tell the market anything about what the Fed may be doing in the immediate future.

Governor Waller, on the other hand, provided a spirited defense of forward guidance that serves a specific purpose, albeit flexible to meet policy needs. Perhaps forward guidance was useful when we were close to the zero bound, and the Fed wanted markets to know that rates would be lower for longer. It may not be appropriate today, given that we are in a different regime.

Nevertheless, forward guidance is supposed to signal policy to the makrets os they will bend to the desires of the Fed. If the Fed is unsure which direction to take, any forward guidance may be wrong-footed. 

In any case, less forward guidance should lead to more bond market volatility and more discussion on what the Fed is thinking. Fed watch is back in vogue.

Hidden Dissent and the Fed

 


The markets were in an uproar over the dissents at the last FOMC meeting, and they may be expecting further dissent at the July meeting. Yes, dissent announces and measures dissent, but there are other ways to measure dissent that may be more useful. Researchers can look at the comments of Fed governors and bank presidents to measure dissent. The use of NLP and LLMs can count words, form sentiment indices, and use context to measure differences of opinion over time. 

Two researchers have examined transcripts and minutes from Fed officials to measure what they call “hidden dissent.” Their index is available through their website, digitecon.org. Their index correlates with dispersion in SEP forecasts. Markets respond to dissent across the Fed.  

Jevons paradox and AI



Jevons’ paradox was developed in the 1800’s to explain dynamics in the coal market. Jevons found that technological improvements can increase resource efficiency, but that will often lead to an increase in total resource consumption. The increase in efficiency leads to lower effective cost, and with costs lower, demand will increase. 

We see this effect across many industries undergoing technological improvements, but it may be best exemplified by the AI market, where efficiency keeps improving while demand still grows. The electricity demand will increase. The demand for chips will increase. The demand for data will increase. Yes, there is efficiency, yet consumption of the core product and associated supplies will also increase. 

There is nothing special about the AI industry. It is following the same behavior we have seen countless times over centuries. 

Monday, July 6, 2026

Data dependence as "constrained discretion"



Ben Bernanke and Rick Mishkin called the use of data dependence in monetary policy "constrained discretion". We are in another of those periods of constrained discretion regarding inflation and monetary policy. 


Robert Hetzel, a former Fed economist, said that policymaking has a flavor of "guess and correct." There are forecasts and guesses of what should be the key target variables, inflation and growth, and then policy is corrected to move toward the target. 

The data dependence is an important part of the guess-and-correct view. There is no set rule, but a set of adjustments toward the expected target.