The Federal Reserve Is Deflating Financial Bubbles, Without a Crash

The Federal Reserve hasn’t had much success so far in wrestling down sky-high inflation, but its monetary tightening campaign is having a major impact in deflating asset bubbles that swelled during the pandemic.

  • The cryptocurrency market — once valued at $3 trillion — has shrunk by more than two-thirds
  • Investor-favored technology stocks have tumbled by more than 50%
  • Red-hot housing prices are falling for the first time in 10 years

Most importantly – and surprisingly – all this is occurring without upending the financial system.

“It’s astonishing,” said Harvard University professor Jeremy Stein, who as a Fed governor from 2012 to 2014 paid special attention to financial stability issues. “If you told any one of us a year ago, ‘we’re going to have a bunch of 75 basis-point hikes,’ you’d have said, ‘Are you nuts? You’re going to blow up the financial system.’”

Fed policymakers have long shied away from using monetary policy to address asset bubbles, saying interest-rate hikes are too blunt a tool for such a mission. But the current deflation in asset prices could help achieve the soft landing in the economy Chair Jerome Powell and his colleagues are seeking.