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<blockquote data-quote="TechnicalPossum" data-source="post: 169984" data-attributes="member: 1648"><p>If you track the deflation against commodities (oil, gold) or secondary reserve currencies (Euro, Pound Sterling, Swiss Frank), there is some deflation. But, I do not think it is a sustained deflation based solely on the Dollar. I think that currency manipulation in China and the instability of Greece could be driving the deflation more than US monetary policy. </p><p></p><p>To answer your question, I would raise the rate 1/8% or 1/4% if it was my show just go get all the bleeding done at once and to throw a bone to the bond market in hopes of stabilizing that market while the stock market corrects. Raising the rate would likely cause a further downward correction in the stock market short term though.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TechnicalPossum, post: 169984, member: 1648"] If you track the deflation against commodities (oil, gold) or secondary reserve currencies (Euro, Pound Sterling, Swiss Frank), there is some deflation. But, I do not think it is a sustained deflation based solely on the Dollar. I think that currency manipulation in China and the instability of Greece could be driving the deflation more than US monetary policy. To answer your question, I would raise the rate 1/8% or 1/4% if it was my show just go get all the bleeding done at once and to throw a bone to the bond market in hopes of stabilizing that market while the stock market corrects. Raising the rate would likely cause a further downward correction in the stock market short term though. [/QUOTE]
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