Fed Got It Right on Rates, If Past Is Any Guide
Commentary by Kevin Hassett Jan. 28 (Bloomberg) -- When the U.S. Federal Reserve surprised the markets with a 0.75-point reduction in the federal funds rate last week, it did something unprecedented. Ever since the Fed began announcing changes in its policy stance in February 1994, it has been rare for the central bank to move between regularly scheduled Open Market Committee meetings. Yet even in those moments when it did take emergency action, the Fed never reduced rates by as much as it did on Jan. 22. This outsized and surprising move has elicited some criticism that Chairman Ben Bernanke's Fed is overreacting. Barry Ritholtz, chief executive officer of Fusion IQ, told CNN last week: `` The Fed's mandate is to maintain price stability and promote economic growth, not backstop the equity markets. That's not their responsibility, but it seems to be what they're doing. '' Is the Fed using a new playbook? Let's look back at previous emergency actions. The fi...