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April 23, 2009 Central Banks are like the giant gorilla of the
investment world. Everyone thinks they can do anything they want.
But can they?
Or are they subject to the laws of the universe just like
everyone else?
They do wield a lot of clout for a day or so when a new
announcement comes out but do they really have a lasting effect
on the markets?
In this article Mark Galasiewski of Elliottwave International
gives us a look at what the effect of the Central Banks really
is. -- Editor
Think That Central Banks Move the Markets? Think Again.
By Mark Galasiewski
The following is excerpted from Elliott
Wave International’s Global Market Perspective. The full
120-page publication, which features forecasts for every major
world market, is available free until April 30.
Visit Elliott Wave International to download it free.
Conventional wisdom says that central banks can influence or
even direct financial markets and the macroeconomy. The very
existence of Elliott waves challenges such assumptions. For if
markets responded to every central bank directive, how could
Elliott waves exist? Parallel trend channels, Fibonacci price
relationships, the similarity of form between waves of different
sizes and time periods—none of that would be possible. Central
bank decisions would have to coincide perfectly with turning
points in Elliott waves, and we know that just doesn’t happen.
But even without using waves, we can expose the conventional
wisdom for the fallacy that it is.
Take, for example, this assertion in a recent article in a
U.K. economic weekly: “Part of the aim of central banks in
driving down interest rates is to encourage a greater risk
appetite among investors.” Two key assumptions underlie that
statement: a) central banks determine interest rates; and b)
lower interest rates can increase society’s appetite for risk.
To see how the first assumption is false, let’s take a look
at the daily chart of Australian interest rate data. It
duplicates a study that Elliott Wave International has often
done with U.S. interest rate data. It shows how movements in the
cash target rate set by Australia’s central bank, the Reserve
Bank of Australia (RBA), appear to follow those in 3-month
Australian Treasury Bills. After decisive moves up in T-bills
from 2006 to early 2008, for example, the RBA faithfully raised
its target. T-bills have since led the RBA during the financial
crisis of the past year. In fact, the record indicates that the
RBA almost always follows T-bills over time.

The proper conclusion to draw is not that the RBA has
orchestrated the decline in rates since the early 1980s—but that
it’s been riding it. During good times, central bankers look
like geniuses; during bad times, they get tarred and feathered.
Closer to the truth is that their interest-rate decisions are
not proactive, but reactive, and that they continually follow in
the footsteps of the market for lack of any other useful guide.
Now let’s look at the second assumption: that lower interest
rates increase society’s appetite for risk. A simple glance at
the weekly chart shows this assumption to be false.

After the 1987 crash, the ASX All Ordinaries actually rallied
for two years on rising rates and then sold off through 1990 on
falling rates. Stocks then rose in 1991 on continued falling
rates and sold off in 1992 on even lower rates. Continue
following the chart to the right and you will see that there is
no consistent correlation between the direction of interest
rates and that of the stock market.
The myth of central bank potency is so pervasive that
conventional analysts can’t even imagine a better explanation
for price trends: that the market is the dog wagging its central
bank tail, not the other way around.
For more information, download Elliott Wave International’s
FREE issue of Global Market Perspective, available until
April 30. The 120-page publication covers every major world
market, global interest rates, international currencies, metals,
energy and more.
Mark Galasiewski is the editor of Elliott Wave
International’s Asian Financial Forecast and member of
EWI’s Global Market Perspective team covering Asian stock
indexes.
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