Fed Speak

Fed Speak

Fed speak is a phrase used to describe former Federal Reserve Board Chair Alan Greenspan's tendency to make wordy statements with little substance. This theory suggests that when market participants can anticipate a monetary policy move by the Fed, then they will form rational expectations about the ultimate impact of the change in monetary policy on prices and interest rates, and that these rational expectations will quickly be incorporated into present prices and interest rates. The new strategy, known as forward guidance, has been to issue very clear statements of intent for ongoing monetary policy with the goal of shaping expectations to direct prices and interest rates to support monetary policy goals. Fed speak was replaced by a new strategy of Fed transparency known as forward guidance under Fed Chair Ben Bernanke. Fed speak is a technique for managing investors' expectations by making deliberately unclear statements regarding monetary policy to prevent markets from anticipating, and thus partially negating, its effects.

Fed speak is a technique for managing investors' expectations by making deliberately unclear statements regarding monetary policy to prevent markets from anticipating, and thus partially negating, its effects.

What is Fed Speak?

Fed speak is a phrase used to describe former Federal Reserve Board Chair Alan Greenspan's tendency to make wordy statements with little substance. Many analysts felt that Greenspan's ambiguous "Fed speak" was an intentional strategy used to prevent the markets from overreacting to his remarks. The assumed intent of Fed speak was to obscure the true meaning of the Fed's intent in an effort to reduce anticipatory action by the market or the investment public. Since Greenspan's reign, other Fed chairs have communicated in a much more concise and direct manner. 

Fed speak is a technique for managing investors' expectations by making deliberately unclear statements regarding monetary policy to prevent markets from anticipating, and thus partially negating, its effects.
Fed speak was employed by and is most closely associated with Alan Greenspan, Fed Chair from 1986 to 2006.
Fed speak was replaced by a new strategy of Fed transparency known as forward guidance under Fed Chair Ben Bernanke.

Understanding Fed Speak

Fed speak is one technique for managing investor and public expectations regarding the current and future monetary policy. Fed speak seeks to deliberately obfuscate policy makers’ intentions in order to prevent markets from anticipating their impact and adjusting prices accordingly. 

Alan Greenspan, who was chair of the Fed from 1986 to 2006, was known for making vague statements that were not easily interpreted. For example, following a speech Greenspan gave in 1995, a headline in the New York Times read, "Doubts Voiced by Greenspan on a Rate Cut," while the Washington Post's headline that day said "Greenspan Hints Fed May Cut Interest Rates." Greenspan's successors, starting with Ben Bernanke, have been known for making more direct statements.

The goal behind Greenspan’s Fed speak is based on the economic theory of rational expectations, especially the work of Nobel Prize winning economist Robert Lucas. This theory suggests that when market participants can anticipate a monetary policy move by the Fed, then they will form rational expectations about the ultimate impact of the change in monetary policy on prices and interest rates, and that these rational expectations will quickly be incorporated into present prices and interest rates. 

However, if prices and interest rates can immediately adjust to the new monetary policy, then the policy will tend to have little or no impact on real economic performance indicators such as employment and real output. For example, fully anticipated expansionary policy would only lead to higher price inflation and higher nominal, long-term interest rates, without reducing unemployment. Thus, rational expectations and compensating behavior by market participants, can hinder the Fed’s ability to achieve policy goals related to full employment and economic growth. Under this theory, only unanticipated monetary policy changes, working their way through the various transmission mechanisms that economists have described, can change real output and employment.

So in order to reduce unemployment and spur economic growth, the The Fed would need to prevent market participants from anticipating its monetary policies. It is widely understood that Greenspan’s Fed speak was intended to do exactly this. By employing deliberately vague and confusing language, he hoped to prevent market participants from anticipating monetary policy decisions. 

At the time Greenspan’s strategy of Fed speak was criticized and sometimes ridiculed as obscurantist and working against the market. However these criticisms were balanced against the fact that Greenspan’s tenure as Fed chief was characterized by reasonably stable economic growth and relatively mild and infrequent recessions. However, some economic research has actually shown that market uncertainty regarding monetary policy can itself have negative consequences for the financial system and the economy. 

Greenspan’s strategy was replaced by a different thinking on how to manage investor and public expectations under his successor Ben Bernanke. The new strategy, known as forward guidance, has been to issue very clear statements of intent for ongoing monetary policy with the goal of shaping expectations to direct prices and interest rates to support monetary policy goals. This renewed transparency is also intended to reduce market uncertainty around monetary policy, especially during periods of economic crisis or recession. It has become the general norm for U.S. monetary policy since the end of Greenspan’s chairship.

Related terms:

Who Is Alan Greenspan? How long was Greenspan Fed chair?

Alan Greenspan was the 13th chair of the Federal Reserve, appointed to an unprecedented five consecutive terms between mid-1987 and early 2006. read more

Expansionary Policy

Expansionary policy is a macroeconomic policy that seeks to boost aggregate demand to stimulate economic growth. read more

Forward Guidance

Forward guidance refers to the communication from a central bank about the state of the economy and likely future course of monetary policy. read more

The Great Moderation

The Great Moderation was a period of decreased macroeconomic volatility in the United States from the mid-1980s to the financial crisis in 2007. read more

Greenspan Put

Greenspan put was the moniker given to the policies implemented by former Fed Chair Alan Greenspan that halted excessive stock market declines. read more

Inflation Hawk

An inflation hawk, in fiscal policy, is a policymaker or advisor who prioritizes controlling inflation and may favor higher interest rates to keep it in check. read more

Monetary Policy

Monetary policy is a set of actions available to a nation's central bank to achieve sustainable economic growth by adjusting the money supply. read more

Rational Expectations Theory

Rational expectations theory proposes that outcomes depend partly upon expectations borne of rationality, past experience, and available information. read more

Who Is Robert E. Lucas Jr.? What Is His Economic Theory?

Robert E. Lucas Jr. is a New Classical economist who won the 1995 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences for his research on rational expectations. read more

Soft Landing

A soft landing, in economics, is a cyclical downturn that avoids recession. read more