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Fed’s Fisher Sees ‘Extraordinary Speculative Activity’ in U.S. on Stimulus

Enlarge image Dallas Fed President Richard W. Fisher

Dallas Fed President Richard W. Fisher

Dallas Fed President Richard W. Fisher

Alex Kraus/Bloomberg

Richard W. Fisher, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.

Richard W. Fisher, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. Photographer: Alex Kraus/Bloomberg

March 23 (Bloomberg) -- Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas President Richard W. Fisher talks about the outlook for an end to the central bank's quantitative easing program. He speaks with Bloomberg's Rainer Buergin in Berlin. (Source: Bloomberg)

Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas President Richard W. Fisher said he sees “extraordinary speculative activity” in the U.S. after the central bank pumped record amounts of stimulus into the economy.

“There is an enormous amount of liquidity sloshing around,” the regional bank chief, who votes on monetary policy this year, said in a speech today in Berlin. “There is abundant liquidity in the machine we know as the United States economy.”

The Fed will likely complete its planned $600 billion of Treasury purchases in June, Fisher said, reiterating his view that no further monetary stimulus will be needed after that. The 62-year-old bank president has criticized the plan, which policy makers voted to keep in place after their March 15 meeting in Washington.

“The word that we gave was that the program would end in June,” Fisher said in a Bloomberg Television interview. “That’s what I expect to happen. And the markets have in my opinion adequately discounted that.”

Fisher repeated remarks he made yesterday in Frankfurt that he’s seeing signs of excess evidenced in the surge of so-called covenant-lite loans and the return of payouts by private equity firms.

“We have done our job,” Fisher said at a forum hosted by the American Academy in Berlin. “We are certainly at risk of doing too much now.”

‘Self-Sustaining’

The U.S. economic recovery is “self-sustaining” and will withstand turmoil overseas, Fisher said in the Bloomberg Television interview. The earthquake in Japan may impact the U.S. economy through some “price and supply chain effects short term,” and the “wars in North Africa” won’t have a “long- term impact on the nature of monetary policy,” Fisher said.

“These can of course pinch a nerve or they can give you a bit of a shiver,” Fisher said. “I don’t think they’re going to derail what’s happening in terms of the economic growth occurring in the U.S. or here in Europe.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Caroline Salas in New York at csalas1@bloomberg.net; Rainer Buergin in Berlin at rbuergin1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Christopher Wellisz cwellisz@bloomberg.net

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