By Pam Martens: December 22, 2013
PBS promised a “debate” this past Friday night on the “benefits and
dangers” of the Federal Reserve as the Fed marks its 100 years of
existence tomorrow. Instead of a debate, two famous stock market
historians made the same stunning announcement – that the Fed has
decided its job is to push up the stock market.
Consuela Mack’s Wealthtrack program on PBS had invited James Grant, Editor and Founder of Grant’s Interest Rate Observer,
and Richard Sylla, the Henry Kaufman Professor of the History of
Financial Institutions and Markets at NYU’s Stern School of Business.
The opening scene for the program shows Sylla in a party hat lighting
the candles on the Fed’s birthday cake while Grant snuffs them out –
suggesting that Sylla would be making pro-Fed statements while Grant
would take the opposing view.
What happened during the program, however, was that both men made the
candid and bold accusation that the Federal Reserve, for the first time
in its history, has assigned itself the job of propping up the stock
market.
Grant had this to say: “New thing – it is in the business of talking
up the stock market…The Fed is manipulating prices, especially on Wall
Street.” To another question from Mack, Grant says: “The Fed has
presided over the decay of finance.”
Professor Sylla adds more fuel to the fire, stating: “The Fed seems
to have, I think almost deliberately, is trying to push the stock market
up. I’ve watched this stuff for 40, 50 years now and this is the first
time in my memory when it seemed to be official U.S. government policy
that the stock market goes up. And the Fed likes this because it thinks
that when the stock market goes up, people who own stocks feel richer,
they’ll go out and spend more money, and the unemployment rate will come
down.” You can watch the full program here.
Is it possible that the Federal Reserve, with its economic wizards
and differential equations, doesn’t know that the more it props up the
stock market and Wall Street, the more it is undermining Main Street and
exacerbating wealth inequality in America?
As brilliantly laid bare by producer Martin Smith on another PBS
program on April 23 of this year, Wall Street has become an
institutionalized wealth transfer mechanism, moving the savings of the
little guy into the pockets of the very rich.
The program, The Retirement Gamble,
showed how if you work for 50 years and receive the typical long-term
return of 7 percent on your 401(k) plan and your fees are 2 percent,
almost two-thirds of your account will go to Wall Street. Under a
typical 2 percent 401(k) fee structure, almost two-thirds of your
working life will go toward paying obscene compensation to Wall Street; a
little over one-third will benefit your family – and that’s before
paying taxes on withdrawals. The dirty secret is the negative impact
that Wall Street fees subtract from compounded interest over long blocks
of time.
In the program, Smith pulls up a compounding calculator on his laptop. On air, he shows the viewer the results:
Smith: “Take an account with a $100,000 balance and
reduce it by 2 percent a year. At the end of 50 years, that 2 percent
annual charge would subtract $63,000 from your account, a loss of 63
percent, leaving you with just a little over $36,000.”
You can prove the point to yourself. Pull up a compounding calculator
on line. Assume an account with a $100,000 balance and compound it at 7
percent for 50 years. That would give you a return of $3,278,041.36.
Now change the calculation to a 5 percent return (reduced by the 2
percent annual fee) for the same $100,000 over the same 50 years. That
will deliver a return of $1,211,938.32. That’s a whopping difference
of $2,066,103.04 – the same 63 percent reduction in value in Smith’s
example.
Approximately 70 percent of Americans who have a retirement plan at
their place of work have a 401(k) plan rather than a pension plan
(defined benefit plan) that would deliver a fixed sum at retirement. Not
everyone is paying 2 percent in 401(k) fees. Some workers are paying
more and others are paying less – sometimes much less if using passively
managed index mutual funds.
But the point is, by making propping up the stock market a goal of
monetary policy, the myopic Federal Reserve is ignoring the fact that
the majority of stock market wealth is ending up in the hands of the top
10 percent, doing very little to create jobs or stimulate the economy
for the other 90 percent of Americans.
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