View original document

The full text on this page is automatically extracted from the file linked above and may contain errors and inconsistencies.

Search Site
Home > Newsroom >

St. Louis Fed's Bullard Offers Perspectives on the Macroeconomic
Situation during 2008
11/21/2013
ROGERS, Ark. – Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis President James Bullard discussed
“The Notorious Summer of 2008” on Thursday at an event hosted by the University of
Arkansas’ Center for Business and Economic Research.
During his presentation, Bullard offered some perspectives on the nature of the
macroeconomic situation during 2008, when the U.S. economy was suffering in the
aftermath of a substantial nancial panic. He noted that the summer of that year has
developed a notorious reputation because it preceded the September 2008 collapse of
two large nancial rms, Lehman Brothers and AIG International, even though the
nancial crisis had been underway for more than a year at that point. “The fact that the
crisis had been continuing for a year without turmoil in nancial markets suggested
more nancial stability than actually existed in the system,” Bullard stated, adding that
there were no clear signs that many nancial rms were about to fail catastrophically.
He noted that in August 2008, the one-year anniversary of the beginning of the crisis, it
appeared that the U.S. had weathered the crisis reasonably well and that continued
slow growth was likely. However, the effects of the commodity price boom that began
during the preceding year contributed to a slowing economy during the third quarter of
2008, he said. “This greatly exacerbated the nancial crisis and led to multiple nancial
rm failures.”
Fed Easing
The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) recognized the crisis in August 2007 and
reacted using conventional tools, Bullard noted. In particular, the FOMC lowered the
federal funds rate target substantially between September 2007 and March 2008 (from
5.25 percent to 2.25 percent).
“The cut in the policy rate during the September 2007-March 2008 time frame was not
as good a tonic for the situation as might have been hoped,” Bullard said. Although the
idea that “lower interest rates cure all” is commonplace within the Fed, “the rate cuts of
early 2008 evidently did little to prevent the nancial panic, and may have exacerbated
the situation to some degree,” he said. In particular, they may have contributed to the
commodity price boom.
Oil Prices
Anecdotal reports during the rst year of the crisis suggested that some nancial rms
—namely, those whose portfolios based on mortgage-backed securities were souring—

sought to earn substantial revenues elsewhere, Bullard noted. He explained that the
“elsewhere” may have been the global commodity markets, which boomed during the
second half of 2007 and the rst half of 2008. “The lower interest rates the Fed
engineered seemingly encouraged this activity, as rms borrowed cheaply and
attempted to pro t in commodities,” Bullard said.
He cited a doubling of the price of crude oil in the span of about 10 months. “This oil
price shock contributed to the slowdown in the U.S. economy in the second half of
2008,” Bullard said.
Real-Time Data
While the National Bureau of Economic Research’s Business Cycle Dating Committee
later named December 2007 as the beginning of the recession, during 2008 there was a
debate as to whether the U.S. was in recession or not. “Based on the data at the time,
the outcome of that debate was far from clear,” Bullard said.
“As of early August 2008, the growth picture for the U.S. economy according to
available real-time data was relatively good,” he noted. Estimates of real GDP growth
were modest but positive for the fourth quarter of 2007 and the rst and second
quarters of 2008. “There was no recession according to the conventional de nition of
two consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth,” he said, although he added that by
current data, real GDP growth in the rst quarter of 2008 was steeply negative.
Thus, there was a good case to be made during the summer of 2008 that the “muddle
through” scenario would continue through the end of the year, Bullard said. Higher oil
prices, however, began to have effects on the economy. For example, Bullard cited light
motor vehicle sales, which were at an annual rate of close to 16 million at the end of
2007 but had fallen to an annual rate of close to 13 million by July-August 2008.
“Forecasters started to realize that the economy was slowing more appreciably than
had been expected,” Bullard said. “The slower economic growth made the nancial
crisis much worse.”
Bear Stearns
In discussing the impact on nancial rms, Bullard recalled the Bear Stearns crisis and
how J.P. Morgan Chase purchased the failing rm with assistance from the Fed in
March 2008. At the time, Bear Stearns was the smallest of the ve large U.S.
investment banks.
Bullard cited two problems with the Bear Stearns deal. One was that it suggested even
larger nancial rms than Bear had some form of implicit insurance from the Fed. “In
the absence of any formal policy announcement, it was unclear whether the Fed had
the intention or the wherewithal to offer insurance to such a large group of rms,” he
said.
The second problem with the deal, according to Bullard, was that it was successful in
the sense that market volatility declined substantially afterwards. “This success
suggested that the Fed could buy time to allow the economy to get past the nancial
crisis by encouraging stronger rms to buy weaker rms in imminent danger of failure,”
Bullard said. “This ‘marriage model’ might have worked, had there not been so many
marriages to arrange,” he added.
Lehman-AIG
Turning to the failures of Lehman and AIG, Bullard said, “The Lehman failure by itself
was not particularly surprising and the U.S. economy could have coped with this single
event.

“What was relatively surprising was that AIG, one of only a handful of triple-A-rated
rms in the U.S., was also in incredibly deep trouble,” he added. Bullard noted that this
brought all nancial rms under vastly increased suspicion and drove the nancial
crisis from mid-September 2008 onwards.
“We will do history a favor if we refer to this event as ‘Lehman-AIG’ and not just
‘Lehman,’” Bullard said.
Near-Zero Interest Rates
In the midst of the crisis, the federal funds rate began trading near zero. In December
2008, the FOMC changed the target policy rate to a range of 0 to 0.25 percent, where it
remains.
“The debate over the wisdom of locking in near-zero rates did not take su cient
account of the experience in Japan, in my view,” Bullard said. The Bank of Japan
lowered its policy rate to near zero in the 1990s, and short-term rates in Japan remain
at zero today.
Bullard noted that some analysis suggests that the sooner policymakers set the policy
rate to zero, the sooner the economy will recover and the sooner interest rates can be
returned to normal. “I have seen no evidence that this is true during the last ve years,”
he said. “Instead, I think the December 2008 FOMC decision unwittingly committed the
U.S. to an extremely long period at the zero lower bound similar to the situation in
Japan, with unknown consequences for the macroeconomy,” Bullard cautioned.
Overall, he noted that the events of 2008 are likely to be studied for decades to come.
The features of the macroeconomic situation that he discussed “have to be addressed
in any comprehensive accounting of what happened,” Bullard said.

GENERAL
Home
About Us
Bank Supervision
Careers
Community Development
Economic Education
Events
Inside the Economy Museum
Newsroom
On the Economy Blog
Open Vault Blog
OUR DISTRICT
Little Rock Branch
Louisville Branch
Memphis Branch
Agricultural Finance Monitor
Housing Market Conditions
SELECTED PUBLICATIONS

Bridges
Economic Synopses
Housing Market Perspectives
In the Balance
Page One Economics
The Quarterly Debt Monitor
Review
Regional Economist
ST. LOUIS FED PRESIDENT
James Bullard's Website
INITIATIVES
Center for Household Financial Stability
Dialogue with the Fed
Federal Banking Regulations
FOMC Speak
In Plain English - Making Sense of the Federal Reserve
Timely Topics Podcasts and Videos
DATA AND INFORMATION SERVICES
CASSIDI®
FRASER®
FRED®
FRED® Blog
GeoFRED®
IDEAS
FOLLOW THE FED
Twitter
Facebook
YouTube
Google Plus
Email Subscriptions
RSS

CONTACT US

|

LEGAL INFORMATION

|

PRIVACY NOTICE & POLICY

|

FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM ONLINE